Manage episode 522143288 series 2876289
As an undergraduate student, Jack Walther's friends often come to him when they need a listening ear, or help with with relationship struggles.
This summer, Walther took his fascination with the brain and mood disorders to Dr. Darrell Mousseau's psychiatry laboratory, learning to untangle some of the tiny molecular threads that might explain why depression so often shows up alongside dementia.
Walther and the research team dug into the physical interactions between serotonin and the beta amyloid peptides that build up in patients with Alzheimer's disease. .
He admits going from the classroom to the laboratory was a sharp learning curve.
"It was totally different," he said. "It's daunting once you get onto it, but once you get going, it makes a lot more sense and you feel way more comfortable."
Using human embryonic kidney cells, Walther and lab staff used cross-linking chemicals to literally 'catch' proteins interacting.
In this episode, Walther recalls the day Mousseau hustled into the lab, results in hand.
"I could see the excitement in his face and it just made kind of the lab buzz a little," said Walther. "We found there is actually some kind of physical interaction between these beta amyloids and the serotonin receptor."
Mousseau's laboratory is narrowing down biochemical events common to depression and Alzheimer's disease, looking for modifable targets in the depressed brain that could slow or delay the onset of the neurodegenerative disorder.
Walther said being part of that laboratory work felt 'incredible'.
"I want to bring some good into this world," he said. "I would like to focus on people that struggle to help themselves. Whether that's neurodegenerative or it's people that are just stuck in place and don't know what to do."
He aims to earn his honours degree in neuroscience, then keep pressing on.
"Whichever way that takes me, that's when I'll be happy with what I've accomplished," Walther said.
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