תוצאות חיפוש - David A. DiGregorio
- Showing 1 - 20 results of 20
-
1
-
2
-
3
-
4
-
5
-
6
-
7
-
8
-
9
-
10
-
11
-
12
-
13
Direct Measurements of Presynaptic Calcium and Calcium-Activated Potassium Currents Regulating Neurotransmitter Release at Cultured<i>Xenopus</i>Nerve–Muscle Synapses מאת Bruce Yazejian, David A. DiGregorio, Julio L. Vergara, Robert E. Poage, Stephen D. Meriney, Alan D. Grinnell
יצא לאור 1997Artigo -
14
-
15
-
16
Nanoscale Distribution of Presynaptic Ca2+ Channels and Its Impact on Vesicular Release during Development מאת Yukihiro Nakamura, Harumi Harada, Naomi Kamasawa, Ko Matsui, Jason S. Rothman, Ryuichi Shigemoto, R. Angus Silver, David A. DiGregorio, Tomoyuki Takahashi
יצא לאור 2014Artigo -
17
-
18
-
19
Nicotine reverses hypofrontality in animal models of addiction and schizophrenia מאת Fani Koukouli, Marie Rooy, Dimitrios Tziotis, Kurt A. Sailor, Heidi C. O’Neill, Josien Levenga, Mirko Witte, Michaël Nilges, Jean‐Pierre Changeux, Charles A. Hoeffer, Jerry A. Stitzel, Boris Gutkin, David A. DiGregorio, Uwe Maskos
יצא לאור 2017Artigo -
20
Stability, affinity, and chromatic variants of the glutamate sensor iGluSnFR מאת Jonathan S. Marvin, Benjamin Scholl, Daniel E. Wilson, Kaspar Podgorski, Abbas Kazemipour, Johannes Alexander Müller, Susanne Schoch, Francisco José Urra Quiroz, Nelson Rebola, Huan Bao, Justin P. Little, Ariana N. Tkachuk, Edward Cai, Adam W. Hantman, Samuel S.‐H. Wang, Victor J. DePiero, Bart G. Borghuis, Edwin R. Chapman, Dirk Dietrich, David A. DiGregorio, David Fitzpatrick, Loren L. Looger
יצא לאור 2018Artigo
כלי חיפוש:
נושאים קשורים
Biology
Neuroscience
Chemistry
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Receptor
Glutamate receptor
Neurotransmission
Physics
Calcium
Inhibitory postsynaptic potential
Organic chemistry
AMPA receptor
Computer science
Excitatory postsynaptic potential
Optics
Quantum mechanics
Electrophysiology
Fluorescence
Materials science
Membrane
Synapse
Synaptic plasticity
Synaptic vesicle
Vesicle
Algorithm
Biological system
Central nervous system
Computation
Hippocampal formation