
Cory Willis
@exosomeguy
Senior Research Associate in @Pluchinolab @Cambridge_Uni interested in astrocytes, microglia, metabolism, and multiple sclerosis.
ID: 855655851092312065
http://www.pluchinolab.org 22-04-2017 05:33:47
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🚀 Thrilled to see our study "Spatiotemporal transcriptomic map of glial cell response in a mouse model of acute brain ischemia" published in @PNAS! Major credit to Daniel Žucha for leading this work, and a big thanks to all collaborators and funders who made this possible 🙌🧵

🚀 Excited to see Bristena Ionescu PhD project, with co-first author Alexandra Nicaise, featured on the cover of Cell Stem Cell - Cholesterol-fuelled neurotoxic senescent PMS iNSCs and its pharmacological rescue is a major leap forward! 🎉 (link cell.com/cell-stem-cell…)


🌟🧠 New Cover from the Studio! We’re excited to share our latest cover illustration on this month's Cell Stem Cell cover, showcasing two groundbreaking studies on using patient-derived brain cells and cellular reprogramming to model multiple sclerosis (MS). These studies reveal






Excited to finally have this published! Out today in Nature Communications, we show that following demyelination in a mouse model of Multiple Sclerosis, treatment of senescent microglia with senolytics leads to improved remyelination. nature.com/articles/s4146… 1/3

Excited that Phil Gross, PhD’s paper in the role of senescence in remyelination has now been published in Nature Communications! Congratulations Phil and thanks to all the lab members George Melchor Zeeba Manavi and collaborators SchaferLabUMassChan Jason Plemel Meng-meng Fu for working with us in this


Congratulations to Cambridge University Women's Crew for winning the 79th Women's Boat Race! 👏



Join us at the Nobel Symposium Multiple Sclerosis: Past, Present and Future Treatments June 5th, 2025 | Jacob Berzelius lecture hall Karolinska Institutet| Stockholm, Sweden free registration at: jirango.com/cview/web/f049…


Excited to share our new paper in J Transl Med: …nslational-medicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11… ICV delivery of fetal-derived neural stem cells is safe and may slow disease in SOD1 ALS mice. A small step in a bigger fight. Grateful to all involved, and fitting timing during #ALSAwarenessMonth




