Professor George Perry
George Perry, Ph.D., HonD, FAAAS, IMBO, RAC, AMC, ACL, FLS,
FSB, CBiol, FRCPath, RSC, FMSA, CChem, CSci, FRSA, FRMS is Professor of
Biology at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
He is also Adjunct Professor of Pathology and Neurosciences, Case
Western Reserve
University and
Affiliate Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Alaska.
He is recognized
in the field of Alzheimer’s disease research particularly for his work
on oxidative stress.
George is distinguished as one of the top 20
Alzheimer’s
disease researchers with over 900 publications, one of the top 100
most-cited scientists in
Neuroscience & Behavior, one of the top
25 scientists in
Free Radical research, and one of the top 10
Alzheimer’s disease researchers.
He served as President for the American Association of
Neuropathologists. He also serves as editor for several journals
including
Journal of Biomedicine and Biotechnology and
Microscopy Research and Technique, is on the editorial board
of many
journals
including
American Journal of Pathology and
Journal of Biological Chemistry, and is
Editor-in-Chief of
Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.
George’s studies are focused on the mechanism of formation and
physiological
consequences of the cytopathology of Alzheimer disease. He has shown
that oxidative damage is the initial cytopathology in Alzheimer’s
disease.
He is working to determine the sequence of events leading to neuronal
oxidative damage and the source of the increased oxygen
radicals.
His
current studies focus on (i) the mechanism for RNA-based redox metal
binding; (ii) the consequences of RNA oxidation on protein synthesis
rate and fidelity; (iii) the role of redox active metals in mediating
prooxidant and antioxidant properties; (iv) the signal transduction
pathways altered in Alzheimer’s disease that allow neurons to evade
apoptosis; and (v) mechanism of phosphorylation control of oxidative
damage to neurofilament proteins.
George coedited
Alzheimer’s Disease: A Century of Scientific And Clinical
Research
and coauthored
Widespread Peroxynitrite-Mediated Damage in Alzheimer’s
Disease,
RNA Oxidation Is a Prominent Feature of Vulnerable Neurons in
Alzheimer’s Disease,
Mitochondrial Abnormalities in Alzheimer’s Disease,
Evidence that the β-Amyloid Plaques of Alzheimer’s Disease
Represent the Redox-silencing and Entombment of Aβ by Zinc,
Ubiquitin is Detected in Neurofibrillary Tangles and Senile Plaque
Neurites of Alzheimer Disease Brains, and
Parkinson’s Disease Is Associated with Oxidative Damage to
Cytoplasmic
DNA and RNA in Substantia Nigra Neurons.
George earned his BA in Zoology from the University of California,
Santa Barbara in 1974
and his Ph.D. in Marine Biology under David Epel at the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography in 1979. He was a postdoctoral fellow in the
Department of Cell Biology in the laboratories of Drs. Bill Brinkley and
Joseph Bryan at Baylor College of Medicine. He performed the majority of
his research at Case Western Reserve University
and was elected a Fellow of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science in
1998.
He was elected a Member of Iberoamerican Molecular Biology Organization
in 2008 and a foreign corresponding member of the Royal Spanish Academy
of Sciences in 2009.
He received an honorary doctorate from Universidad Arturo Prat, Chile in
2007.
He became a corresponding member of
Academia Mexicana de Ciencias in 2010 and for the Academia de
Ciêncas de Lisboa in 2011.
He received the
Distinguished Professional Mentor Award, Society for the
Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Sciences in 2010 and the
Senior Investigator Award for the International College of Geriatric
Psychoneuropharmacology in 2011.
He is
Member of the Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives.
He was elected a Fellow to the
Linnean Society, the Royal Society of Chemistry, the Royal College
of Pathologists, and the Microscopy Society of America — all in
2011.