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75 results on '"Muller KJ"'

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1. Physiologic maturation is both extrinsically and intrinsically regulated in progenitor-derived neurons.

2. Novel Regulatory Mechanisms for the SoxC Transcriptional Network Required for Visual Pathway Development.

3. Transplanted neurons integrate into adult retinas and respond to light.

4. Innexin and pannexin channels and their signaling.

5. Arachidonic acid closes innexin/pannexin channels and thereby inhibits microglia cell movement to a nerve injury.

6. Tissue engineering the retinal ganglion cell nerve fiber layer.

7. Neuroglial ATP release through innexin channels controls microglial cell movement to a nerve injury.

8. Optical analysis of circuitry for respiratory rhythm in isolated brainstem of foetal mice.

9. Central nervous system regeneration: from leech to opossum.

10. ATP and NO dually control migration of microglia to nerve lesions.

11. Lasting changes in a network of interneurons after synapse regeneration and delayed recovery of sensitization.

12. Innexins form two types of channels.

13. Atypical embryonic synapses fail to regenerate in adulthood.

14. Neuronal competition for action potential initiation sites in a circuit controlling simple learning.

15. Medullary pacemaker neurons are essential for both eupnea and gasping in mammals vs. medullary pacemaker neurons are essential for gasping, but not eupnea, in mammals.

16. Reduced axon sprouting after treatment that diminishes microglia accumulation at lesions in the leech CNS.

17. Development and pH sensitivity of the respiratory rhythm of fetal mice in vitro.

18. A 3-synapse positive feedback loop regulates the excitability of an interneuron critical for sensitization in the leech.

19. Optical recording from respiratory pattern generator of fetal mouse brainstem reveals a distributed network.

20. Repair and regeneration of functional synaptic connections: cellular and molecular interactions in the leech.

21. Methylene blue blocks cGMP production and disrupts directed migration of microglia to nerve lesions in the leech CNS.

22. Progressive recovery of learning during regeneration of a single synapse in the medicinal leech.

23. Differential effects of serotonin enhance activity of an electrically coupled neural network.

24. Axotomy of single fluorescent nerve fibers in developing mammalian spinal cord by photoconversion of diaminobenzidine.

25. Multiple sites of action potential initiation increase neuronal firing rate.

26. Non-associative learning and serotonin induce similar bi-directional changes in excitability of a neuron critical for learning in the medicinal leech.

27. Nerve injury induces a rapid efflux of nitric oxide (NO) detected with a novel NO microsensor.

28. Action potential reflection and failure at axon branch points cause stepwise changes in EPSPs in a neuron essential for learning.

29. Nitric oxide influences injury-induced microglial migration and accumulation in the leech CNS.

30. Injury-induced expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase by glial and microglial cells in the leech central nervous system within minutes after injury.

31. Regeneration of a central synapse restores nonassociative learning.

32. Action potential initiation site depends on neuronal excitation.

33. Neurite outgrowth through lesions of neonatal opossum spinal cord in culture.

34. Accurate synapse regeneration despite ablation of the distal axon segment.

35. Repair of the central nervous system: lessons from lesions in leeches.

36. In situ hybridization reveals transient laminin B-chain expression by individual glial and muscle cells in embryonic leech central nervous system.

37. The S cell: an interneuron essential for sensitization and full dishabituation of leech shortening.

38. Novel synapses compensate for a neuron ablated in embryos.

39. Axonal sprouting and laminin appearance after destruction of glial sheaths.

40. Synaptic integration at a sensory-motor reflex in the leech.

41. Unequal competition between axons for neuronal targets.

42. Competitive interactions between neurons making axosomatic contacts in the leech.

43. Accumulation of laminin and microglial cells at sites of injury and regeneration in the central nervous system of the leech.

44. Expression of surface glycoproteins early in leech neural development.

45. Nerve fiber growth and the cellular response to axotomy.

46. Different properties of synapses between a single sensory neurone and two different motor cells in the leech C.N.S.

47. Laser microbeam axotomy and conduction block show that electrical transmission at a central synapse is distributed at multiple contacts.

48. Distinctions between gap junctions and sites of intermediate filament attachment in the leech C.N.S.

49. Accurate regeneration of an electrical synapse between two leech neurones after destruction of the ensheathing glial cell.

50. Sprouting and regeneration of sensory axons after destruction of ensheathing glial cells in the leech central nervous system.

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