Expression of synapsin I gene in primary cultures of differentiating rat cortical neurons
โ Scribed by Italia Liegro; Giovanni Savettieri; Massimo Coppolino; Maria Scaturro; Maria Monte; Tommaso Nastasi; Giuseppe Salemi; Daniele Castiglia; Alessandro Cestelli
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 848 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-3190
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Neuronal and glial cells in primary culture prepared from the hypothalamic-brain stem areas of one-day-old rat brains were analyzed for the presence of angiotensinogen messenger RNA (mRNA) to further confirm our previous conclusion that the brain contains an exclusive angiotensin system. Angiotensin
## Abstract We report here that differentiated, primary, postmitotic neurons and photoreceptors in cultures obtained from embryonic chicks can express foreign genes after transfection by the calcium phosphate method. A variety of viral promoters were tested by using either ฮฒโgalactosidase or chlora
## Abstract In many taxa, photoreceptors and their secondโorder neurons operate with graded changes in membrane potential and can release neurotransmitter tonically. A common feature of such neurons in vertebrates is that they have not been found to contain synapsins, a family of proteins that indi
## Abstract In this study, we examined the transport mechanisms for guanine and guanosine in rat neurons and astrocytes, and compared their characteristics. In the both types of cell, the uptake of [^3^H]guanine and [^3^H]guanosine was timeโ, temperatureโ, and concentrationโdependent, and Na^+^โind
## Abstract Periodic and spontaneous Ca^2+^ spikes are observed in neurons during development of the central nervous system, and spontaneous changes in intracellular Ca^2+^ concentration in neurons play important roles in the development of neural circuits. To clarify the roles of metabotropic glut