Cite
VE-PTP maintains the endothelial barrier via plakoglobin and becomes dissociated from VE-cadherin by leukocytes and by VEGF.
MLA
Nottebaum, Astrid F., et al. “VE-PTP Maintains the Endothelial Barrier via Plakoglobin and Becomes Dissociated from VE-Cadherin by Leukocytes and by VEGF.” The Journal of Experimental Medicine, vol. 205, no. 12, Nov. 2008, pp. 2929–45. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20080406.
APA
Nottebaum, A. F., Cagna, G., Winderlich, M., Gamp, A. C., Linnepe, R., Polaschegg, C., Filippova, K., Lyck, R., Engelhardt, B., Kamenyeva, O., Bixel, M. G., Butz, S., & Vestweber, D. (2008). VE-PTP maintains the endothelial barrier via plakoglobin and becomes dissociated from VE-cadherin by leukocytes and by VEGF. The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 205(12), 2929–2945. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20080406
Chicago
Nottebaum, Astrid F, Giuseppe Cagna, Mark Winderlich, Alexander C Gamp, Ruth Linnepe, Christian Polaschegg, Kristina Filippova, et al. 2008. “VE-PTP Maintains the Endothelial Barrier via Plakoglobin and Becomes Dissociated from VE-Cadherin by Leukocytes and by VEGF.” The Journal of Experimental Medicine 205 (12): 2929–45. doi:10.1084/jem.20080406.