SECTION I. DEGENERATIVE DISORDERS
SECTION II. MOVEMENT DISORDERS
SECTION III. NEURO-ONCOLOGY
SECTION IV. NEUROCUTANEOUS DISORDERS
SECTION V. EPILEPSY
SECTION VI. WHITE MATTER DISEASESSECTION VII. NEUROPATHIES AND
NEURONOPATHIES
SECTION VIII. MUSCLE AND NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION DISORDERS
SECTION IX. STROKE
Sub-Section: Psychiatric Disease
SECTION X. A NEUROLOGIC GENE MAP
Roger N. Rosenberg, MD is a graduate of Northwestern University
Medical School, With Distinction, and was subsequently trained in
Neurology with H. Houston Merritt, MD at the Neurological
Institute, Columbia University, New York, was Chief Resident and
then was a Post-Doctoral Fellow with Nobel Laureate Marshall
Nirenberg at the NIH in the Laboratory of Biochemical Genetics. He
is Board Certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and
Neurology. He is holder of the Zale Distinguished Chair and
Professor of Neurology and Neurotherapeutics at the University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas since 1973 and
developed the department for 18 years as Chair from 1973-1991.
He described for the first time in 1975 Machado Joseph disease, an
autosomal dominant cerebellar degeneration, which produces
imbalance and impaired coordination, and showed it was due to a
unique expansion of DNA in the causal gene. It is the most common
inherited form of impaired coordination in the world and his
research has provided a genetic marker to eliminate it in large
families in future generations.
He has served as the Founding Director of the UT Southwestern NIH
funded Alzheimer’s Disease Center and Principal Investigator of the
NIH Center Grant from 1987-2019.
He directs an active laboratory effort in Alzheimer’s Disease. He
is developing a DNA Aβ42 trimer vaccine for Alzheimer's disease for
which he was awarded a US Patent "Amyloid Beta Gene Vaccines" in
January 2009. It has been tested in mouse, transgenic mouse, New
Zealand white rabbits and rhesus monkeys. The vaccine produces
effective anti-Aβ42 peptide antibody levels and is non-inflammatory
in all three species. The vaccine reduces by 40% Aβ42 peptide and
by 50% tau and phospho-tau in the brains of 3X AD Tg mice, the two
main pathologies of Alzheimer’s disease, with high levels of
anti-Aβ42 antibody and with a non-inflammatory immune response. He
is preparing now a Phase 1 Clinical trial Grant - First in Human to
determine its effectiveness and safety in human subjects.
He has published 297 original scientific articles, chapters,
reviews, and editorials.
He served as Editor in Chief from 1997 through 2017 for JAMA
Neurology (formerly Archives of Neurology), a major international
neurology journal, published by the American Medical Association.
During his tenure, he raised the Impact Factor of the journal from
3.0 to 10.2, placing JAMA Neurology as #1 of all US publications in
neurology.
He is the founding editor of two of the landmark texts in
neuroscience. Rosenberg’s Molecular and Genetic Basis of
Neurological and Psychiatric Disease, 5th edition, published in
2015 by Elsevier. The 6th edition will publish in 2020. The Atlas
of Clinical Neurology, 4th edition, has just been published.
He is a former President of the American Academy of Neurology,
former Vice-President of the American Neurological Association, an
Honorary Member of both organizations, and a Fellow of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. He received the first
Science Medal in 2009 from the World Federation of Neurology for
his contributions to neuro-genetics, for his original clinical and
molecular genetics research on Machado-Joseph disease, and the
development of the DNA Abeta42 trimer vaccine for Alzheimer’s
disease. Juan M. Pascual, M.D., Ph.D., is the inaugural holder of
The Once Upon a Time Foundation Professorship in Pediatric
Neurologic Diseases and also holds the Ed and Sue Rose
Distinguished Professorship in Neurology. His laboratory research
interests span virtually the entire field of neuroscience,
including medical neuroscience, from molecular structure and
function (including drug action), neural physiology and metabolism
at the cellular, circuit and whole-brain level and neurogenetics,
all of which is complemented with neurological patient care and
clinical trials. Laboratory research greatly influences his
clinical activities and patient observations guide his laboratory
research direction. As a clinician, Dr. Pascual specializes in
genetic and metabolic diseases of the nervous and neuromuscular
systems of infants, children, and adults with a particular emphasis
on complex diagnostic problems, second opinions for patients
visiting from the rest of the U.S. and abroad, and in clinical
trials. Dr. Pascual has special clinical research expertise in
undiagnosed and rare diseases, glucose metabolism, mitochondrial,
degenerative, and multi-organ disorders. Dr. Pascual is a tenured
faculty member in four Departments at UT Southwestern Medical
Center: Neurology and Neurotherapeutics, Physiology, Pediatrics,
and the Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth & Development /
Center for Human Genetics. He is also Director of the Rare Brain
Disorders Program (Clinic and Laboratory). He is also a member of
the Division of Pediatric Neurology, of the graduate Ph.D. programs
in Neuroscience and Integrative Biology, and of the postgraduate
clinical training programs in Neurology, Pediatric Neurology,
Pediatrics, and Medical Genetics. He teaches at UT Southwestern
Medical School. In addition, Dr. Pascual is an adjunct professor in
the Department of Biological Sciences at the School of Natural
Sciences and Mathematics, The University of Texas at Dallas. Dr.
Pascual directs a highly collaborative research laboratory and is
credentialed campus-wide at Children's Medical Center Dallas, UT
Southwestern University Hospitals and Clinics, and Parkland
Memorial Hospital, where he consults on inpatients and outpatients
with particularly complex or severe diseases. Much of his research
is funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Pascual
received his M.D. degree with unique distinction from the
Universidad de Granada, Spain, one of the oldest universities in
the world, founded in 1349 by Yusuf I, Sultan of Granada and one of
the builders of the Alhambra. He received his Ph.D. degree in
Molecular Physiology and Biophysics from Baylor College of Medicine
in Houston, Texas, under Arthur M. Brown, M.D., Ph.D., McCollum
Professor and Chair. His postdoctoral research was conducted under
Arthur Karlin, Ph.D., Higgins Professor and Director of the Center
for Molecular Recognition, College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Columbia University and, later, at the Colleen Giblin Research
Laboratories for Pediatric Neurology at the same institution under
a Neurological Sciences Academic Development Award from the
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. He also
received residency training in Pediatrics at Washington University
School of Medicine - St. Louis Children's Hospital and in Neurology
and Pediatric Neurology at the Neurological Institute of New York -
Columbia University Medical Center. He received certification in
Neurology with Special Qualification in Child Neurology from the
American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
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