eu efre logo

Science Publication by A. Dityatev

 

The CBBS congratulates Alexander Dityatev’s working group at the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) on the latest publication in Science about CPTX, a synthetic synaptic organizer protein, which restores glutamatergic neuronal circuits.

Summary:

Neuronal synapses undergo structural and functional changes throughout life, which are essential for nervous system physiology. However, these changes may also perturb the excitatory–inhibitory neurotransmission balance and trigger neuropsychiatric and neurological disorders. Molecular tools to restore this balance are highly desirable. Here, we designed and characterized CPTX, a synthetic synaptic organizer combining structural elements from cerebellin-1 and neuronal pentraxin-1. CPTX can interact with presynaptic neurexins and postsynaptic AMPA-type ionotropic glutamate receptors and induced the formation of excitatory synapses both in vitro and in vivo. CPTX restored synaptic functions, motor coordination, spatial and contextual memories, and locomotion in mouse models for cerebellar ataxia, Alzheimer’s disease, and spinal cord injury, respectively. Thus, CPTX represents a prototype for structure-guided biologics that can efficiently repair or remodel neuronal circuits.

Summary of Science article.

Information about Alexanders Lab.

Universität Magdeburg stärkt internationale Rolle als Standort für neurowissenschaftliche Spitzenforschung

Rektor unterzeichnet Kooperationsrahmenvertrag mit der University of Iowa in den USA

Strategische Partnerschaft soll Zell- und Gentherapien schneller zu Patienten bringen

Universität Magdeburg und Fraunhofer IZI verzahnen Forschung, Herstellung und klinische Prüfung neuer Behandlungsansätze.

Nachruf auf Volker Höllt

Wir trauern um Prof. Dr. med. Volker Höllt, der im Februar 2026 im 81. Lebensjahr verstorben ist.

press releases

Read more...

Members

Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg

LIN Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology Magdeburg


Promoting young researchers

CBBS Graduierten Logo