Tara Spires-Jones facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Tara Spires-Jones
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Born |
Tara Spires
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Alma mater | University of Texas at Austin University of Oxford |
Known for | Researching mechanisms of synapse degeneration in Alzheimer’s disease. |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Neuroscience |
Institutions | Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School University of Edinburgh |
Thesis | Genetic and epigenetic interactions in activity-dependent cortical plasticity. (2003) |
Tara Spires-Jones is professor of neurodegeneration and deputy director of the Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences at the University of Edinburgh. She is also a group leader in the UK Dementia Research Institute.
Education and career
Spires-Jones studied as an undergraduate at the University of Texas at Austin, where she graduated as a Bachelor of Science in biochemistry and a Bachelor of Arts in French in 1999. She was awarded a British Marshall Scholarship, which enabled her to undertake a D.Phil. in environmental influences on synapse development and degeneration with Sir Colin Blakemore at the University of Oxford. After completing her D.Phil. in 2004, Spires-Jones worked as a postdoctoral research fellow neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, where she undertook research on synaptic degeneration and Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis. Following her fellowship she remained at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School as an instructor from 2006 to 2011 and assistant professor from 2011 to 2013. In 2013 Spires-Jones moved to Scotland to join the University of Edinburgh as reader and Chancellor's Fellow. She was awarded a personal chair of neurodegeneration at the university in 2017.
Spires-Jones is a Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS)-KAVLI Network of Excellence scholar, chair of the Alzheimer's Research UK Grant Review Board and a member of the Scottish Government's Scottish Science Advisory Council.
She regularly engages in science communication, outreach and engagement, and is a member of the Science Media Centre, advising journalists on science reporting, and commenting on new science stories.
Research
Spires-Jones' research focuses on mechanisms of neurodegeneration in diseases that cause dementia, other neurodegenerative diseases, and ageing. She focuses specifically on the degeneration of synapse connections between neuronal braincells in Alzheimer's disease. She made the important discovery that soluble forms of amyloid beta and tau proteins that accumulate in neuropathological lesions in Alzheimer's disease both accumulate within synapses where they contribute to degeneration and cognitive decline. This work started in model systems where she showed that lowering levels of these toxic proteins allows functional recovery. Importantly, her team was the first to discover synaptic localisation of amyloid beta and tau in synapses in human Alzheimer’s brain. This was achieved using a technique she pioneered for use in human autopsy tissue. She has several collaborations with industry, one of which has contributed to a clinical trial of a drug to remove amyloid beta from synapses in Alzheimer’s disease.
The spread of tau pathology through the brain in Alzheimer’s disease correlates strongly with cognitive symptoms, and weherever tau pathology appears in the brain, neuron death occurs. Spires-Jones discovered that in addition to accumulating within synapses, tau spreads trans-synaptically through neural circuits. As a postdoc, she characterized tau pathology and neurodegeneration in the rTg4510 mouse model of tauopathy, the first robust tau mouse model. As a junior faculty member at Harvard Medical School, Tara published a series of papers with Alix de Calignon who she co-supervised as a PhD student. In these studies, they found that tau aggregation in neurons counterintuitively protects cells from acute death and that tau pathology propagates through neural circuits in mice. In human brain, Tara’s group very recently observed tau in pre and post-synapses supporting potential tau spread through synapses in human disease. These data are important because stopping the spread of tau pathology through the brain has the potential to stop disease progression.
Spires-Jones’ research has also shown that alpha-synuclein protein builds up in synapses in Dementia with Lewy Bodies, suggesting that these connections enable the protein to jump between cells, spreading damage through the brain and causing symptoms of dementia.
She has also made important discoveries linking two genetic risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease, Apolipoprotein E4 and Clusterin to synaptic degeneration and has contributed to understanding of synapse degeneration in motorneurone disease, and schizophrenia.