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1. Is Viral Vector Gene Delivery More Effective Using Biomaterials?

2. Resistance wheel exercise from mid-life has minimal effect on sciatic nerves from old mice in which sarcopenia was prevented

3. Functional dissection of NEAT1 using genome editing reveals substantial localization of the NEAT1-1 isoform outside paraspeckles

4. Specific ion channels contribute to key elements of pathology during secondary degeneration following neurotrauma

5. Transcriptomic Analysis Reveals the Heterogeneous Role of Conducting Films Upon Electrical Stimulation.

6. The spectrum of Ih ice using terahertz time-domain spectroscopy.

7. Hydration water drives the self-assembly of guanosine monophosphate.

9. Effects of amyloid precursor protein peptide APP96-110, alone or with human mesenchymal stromal cells, on recovery after spinal cord injury.

10. Peptide Hydrogel Scaffold for Mesenchymal Precursor Cells Implanted to Injured Adult Rat Spinal Cord.

11. Is Viral Vector Gene Delivery More Effective Using Biomaterials?

12. Regeneration of adult rat sensory and motor neuron axons through chimeric peroneal nerve grafts containing donor Schwann cells engineered to express different neurotrophic factors.

13. Transcriptional repression of PTEN in neural cells using CRISPR/dCas9 epigenetic editing.

14. Acute Cellular and Functional Changes With a Combinatorial Treatment of Ion Channel Inhibitors Following Spinal Cord Injury.

15. Age-related loss of VGLUT1 excitatory, but not VGAT inhibitory, immunoreactive terminals on motor neurons in spinal cords of old sarcopenic male mice.

16. Cortical AAV-CNTF Gene Therapy Combined with Intraspinal Mesenchymal Precursor Cell Transplantation Promotes Functional and Morphological Outcomes after Spinal Cord Injury in Adult Rats.

17. Resistance wheel exercise from mid-life has minimal effect on sciatic nerves from old mice in which sarcopenia was prevented.

18. Specific ion channels contribute to key elements of pathology during secondary degeneration following neurotrauma.

19. Functional dissection of NEAT1 using genome editing reveals substantial localization of the NEAT1_1 isoform outside paraspeckles.

20. Neurotrophic Factors Used to Treat Spinal Cord Injury.

21. Specific combinations of ion channel inhibitors reduce excessive Ca 2+ influx as a consequence of oxidative stress and increase neuronal and glial cell viability in vitro.

22. A Neurogenic Perspective of Sarcopenia: Time Course Study of Sciatic Nerves From Aging Mice.

23. Neurotrophic factors for spinal cord repair: Which, where, how and when to apply, and for what period of time?

24. Method for the assessment of effects of a range of wavelengths and intensities of red/near-infrared light therapy on oxidative stress in vitro.

25. Hierarchical patterning of multifunctional conducting polymer nanoparticles as a bionic platform for topographic contact guidance.

26. The State of Play with iPSCs and Spinal Cord Injury Models.

27. Long live the stem cell: the use of stem cells isolated from post mortem tissues for translational strategies.

28. A comparison of the behavioral and anatomical outcomes in sub-acute and chronic spinal cord injury models following treatment with human mesenchymal precursor cell transplantation and recombinant decorin.

29. Magnetic field directed fabrication of conducting polymer nanowires.

30. Immunohistochemical, ultrastructural and functional analysis of axonal regeneration through peripheral nerve grafts containing Schwann cells expressing BDNF, CNTF or NT3.

31. Systematic review of induced pluripotent stem cell technology as a potential clinical therapy for spinal cord injury.

32. Human mesenchymal precursor cells (Stro-1⁺) from spinal cord injury patients improve functional recovery and tissue sparing in an acute spinal cord injury rat model.

33. Scaffolds to promote spinal cord regeneration.

34. Strain-specific differences in the effects of cyclosporin A and FK506 on the survival and regeneration of axotomized retinal ganglion cells in adult rats.

35. A comparison between real-time quantitative PCR and DNA hybridization for quantitation of male DNA following myoblast transplantation.

36. Irradiation of dystrophic host tissue prior to myoblast transfer therapy enhances initial (but not long-term) survival of donor myoblasts.

37. A role for natural killer cells in the rapid death of cultured donor myoblasts after transplantation.

38. Complement and myoblast transfer therapy: donor myoblast survival is enhanced following depletion of host complement C3 using cobra venom factor, but not in the absence of C5.

39. Problems and solutions in myoblast transfer therapy.

40. Why do cultured transplanted myoblasts die in vivo? DNA quantification shows enhanced survival of donor male myoblasts in host mice depleted of CD4+ and CD8+ cells or Nk1.1+ cells.

41. Immunobiology and the future of myoblast transfer therapy.

42. Development and characterization of new flavivirus-resistant mouse strains bearing Flv(r)-like and Flv(mr) alleles from wild or wild-derived mice.

43. Characterization of defective viral RNA produced during persistent infection of Vero cells with Murray Valley encephalitis virus.

44. Differential transcription efficiency of two Ig VH promoters in vitro.

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