Laura Manuelidis, MD
Professor of Surgery (Neuropathology)Cards
About
Titles
Professor of Surgery (Neuropathology)
Section Chief Neuropathology (Surgery)
Biography
Dr. Manuelidis discovered and sequenced major repeated DNAs (human alpha satellite and retroviral LINE DNAs). She demonstrated the specific organization of each respectively in centromeres and in dark tissue-specific gene regions by non-isotopic in-situ hybridization. This method also allowed her to delineate the cohesive 3-D arrangement of individual chromosomes in the interphase nucleus of different types of cells.
She also is known for studies of neurodegenerative processes, with numerous original contributions to the transmission and pathogenesis of human Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease and sheep scrapie agents. These unique animal and culture models have revealed fundamental blood-borne routes of infection, innate immune responses to a foreign infectious agent, and virus-like structural characteristics of the infectious particle. In contrast to the dominant protein only or prion hypothesis of infection, Infectious particles stripped of detectable prion protein (PrP) remain highly infectious. Moreover, nucleases destroy infectivity but do not affect any form of host PrP. Instead, host PrP misfolding appears as a late stress response that traps and eliminates the infectious agent.
Recently she discovered two circular "SPHINX" DNAs in the cytoplasm of mammalian cells. These elements are derived from prokaryotes and are present in mammalian brain cells, especially at synapses. These findings have major ramifications for the discovery of additional unsuspected evolutionary types of endosymbiotic exchanges between mammals and ancient environmental structures and neurodegeneration.
Appointments
Neuropathology
Section ChiefDualNeuropathology
ProfessorPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- MD
- Yale University (1967)
- BA
- Sarah Lawrence College (1963)
Research
Overview
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News & Links
News
- June 02, 2018
Association of Yale Alumni in Medicine Distinguished Alumni Award
- December 25, 2017
A million-dollar fund will support junior researchers
- December 20, 2017Source: Medicine@Yale
A million-dollar fund will support junior researchers
- June 17, 2016
Continuous Production of Prions after Infectious Particles Are Eliminated: Implications for Alzheimer’s Disease