Dr Claire Goldsbury

Senior Research Fellow
Physiology, School of Medical Sciences

M02 - Mallet Street Campus
The University of Sydney
NSW 2006 Australia

T:+61 2 9351 0878
F:+61 2 9351 0731
E:

Biographical details

Claire Goldsbury is a Senior Research Fellow and Group Leader at the BMRI. Her lab was established in July 2007 and comprises a team of Australian PhD and honours students and visiting international students. We collaborate with other groups in the wider University of Sydney and NSW community and internationally.

Current national competitive grants*

2011

How Alzheimer's-associated cytoskeletal inclusions form road blocks and impair trafficking in neurons
Goldsbury C
NHMRC Project Grant ($338,750 over 3 years)

* Grants administered through the University of Sydney

Keywords

Cell biology; Alzheimer's disease; Biochemistry; Aging; Neurosciences

Publications

2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004

2009

  
  • Whiteman, I., Gervasio, O., Cullen, K., Guillemin, G., Jeong, E., Witting, P., Antao, S., Minamide, L., Bamburg, J., Goldsbury, C. Activated actin-depolymerizing factor/cofilin sequesters phosphorylated microtubule-associated protein during the assembly of alzheimer-like neuritic cytoskeletal striations. The Journal of neuroscience. 2009; 29:12994-13005. [Abstract]

2008

  
  • Goldsbury, C., Whiteman, I., Jeong, E., Lim, Y. Oxidative stress increases levels of endogenous amyloid-beta peptides secreted from primary chick brain neurons. Aging cell. 2008; 7:771-5. [Abstract]

2007

  
  • Goldsbury, C., Thies, E., Konzack, S., Mandelkow, E. Quantification of amyloid precursor protein and tau for the study of axonal traffic pathways. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. 2007; 27:3357-3363. [Abstract]

2006

  
  • Goldsbury, C., Mocanu, M., Thies, E., Kaether, C., Haass, C., Keller, P., Biernat, J., Mandelkow, E., Mandelkow, E. Inhibition of APP trafficking by tau protein does not increase the generation of amyloid-beta peptides. Traffic. 2006; 7:873-888. [Abstract]

2005

  
  • Goldsbury, C., Frey, P., Olivieri, V., Aebi, U., Müller, S. Multiple assembly pathways underlie amyloid-beta fibril polymorphisms. Journal of molecular biology. 2005; 352:282-298. [Abstract]
  • Goldsbury, C., Green, J. Time-lapse atomic force microscopy in the characterization of amyloid-like fibril assembly and oligomeric intermediates. Methods in molecular biology. 2005; 299:103-128. [Abstract]

2004

  
  • Green, J., Kreplak, L., Goldsbury, C., Li Blatter, X., Stolz, M., Cooper, G., Seelig, A., Kistler, J., Aebi, U. Atomic force microscopy reveals defects within mica supported lipid bilayers induced by the amyloidogenic human amylin peptide. Journal of molecular biology. 2004; 342:877-887. [Abstract]
  • Green, J., Goldsbury, C., Kistler, J., Cooper, G., Aebi, U. Human amylin oligomer growth and fibril elongation define two distinct phases in amyloid formation. The Journal of biological chemistry. 2004; 279:12206-12212. [Abstract]