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Karen Duff

Prof Karen Duff

(She/her) Ph.D (Cantab), FMedSci

Centre Director

Revealing the molecular causes and consequences of tauopathy in Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia

Techniques

Advanced microscopy & imaging, Advanced spectroscopy, Bioinformatics, Biophysical techniques, CRISPR, Drug screening, Electrophysiology, Experimental medicine, Flow cytometry, Fluid biomarkers, Genomics, Mass spec-based proteomics, Mouse behaviour, Mouse in vivo imaging, Single cell / nucleus transcriptomics, Spatial transcriptomics, Stem cells / iPSCs

Biography

Prof Karen Duff is a leader in the field of neurodegenerative disease having first started her career as a PhD student in the Cambridge department of Nobel Prize winner Sydney Brenner. Prof Duff has worked for over 30 years on Alzheimer’s disease and the tauopathies, for which she was awarded the prestigious Potamkin Prize in 2006. Her interests span a range of research areas, from discovery science through to therapeutic approaches. Over her career she has created several important mouse models for AD and FTD-tau and she has studied several disease-associated molecular mechanisms using innovative and state of the art methods. Her most recent interests include the causes and consequences of tau pathology propagation, and the basis of selective cellular vulnerability. Prof Duff recently left Columbia University in New York and has joined the UK DRI at UCL as Centre Director, leading a dynamic and ambitious programme of multidisciplinary and clinically-orientated research.

Duff Lab

Explore the work of the Duff Lab, revealing the molecular causes and consequences of tauopathy in Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia

Microglia and astrocytes around amyloid plaque