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When you look back at a 45-year career, there are a multitude of moments that stand out. For Allan Butterfield, Professor of Biological 糖心vlog官方入口 in the University of Kentucky College of Arts & Sciences, his signature discovery grew from just such a Eureka moment on the sidewalk on campus.
鈥淚 was walking back from Sanders-Brown Center on Aging to the 糖心vlog官方入口 Building 鈥 two or three blocks 鈥 I kept asking myself, why are there so many proteins that are known to be altered in Alzheimer's disease? Why isn鈥檛 there just one?鈥 Butterfield said, 鈥淎nd it occurred to me, 鈥極h, what if there is a free radical in the brain that is hitting all these different proteins and different lipids and causing them to be defective?鈥 I was so deep in thought about it that I almost got hit by a car.鈥
He went back to Sanders-Brown and borrowed some amyloid beta peptide, or Abeta, a substance that accumulates in the brains of people who have Alzheimer's. He tested the peptide and, sure enough, a free radical signal was there.
鈥淪o our lab discovered the free radical associated with this peptide and changed the paradigm of how you think about the pathogenesis of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.鈥 Butterfield published this discovery in 1994, and in a year鈥檚 time it was widely accepted. Over the course of his career, nearly 700 papers came out of his highly productive laboratory and he鈥檚 trained students who have gone on to research careers around the globe.
In this podcast, you鈥檒l hear Butterfield鈥檚 take on why many amyloid Alzheimer鈥檚 drugs have failed 鈥 鈥淭hey鈥檝e forgotten their chemistry. They鈥檙e targeting the wrong point of the process.鈥 鈥 and why he鈥檚 now serving in an administrative role as Associate Vice President for Centers & Institutes and Research Priority Areas within UK Research.