Subject index for research articles and revieww, 1993
Transcript of Subject index for research articles and revieww, 1993
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Acetylcholine R. Bauerfeind, A. Rbnier-Vigouroux, T. Flatmark, and W. B. Huttner Selective Storage of Acetylcholine, but Not Catecholamines, in Neuro- endocrine Synaptic-like Microvesicles of Early Endosomal Origin, 77, 105-121
K. Gengyo-Ando, Y. Kamiya, A. Yamakawa, K.-i. Kodaira, K. Nishiwaki, J. Miwa, I. Hori, and R. Hosono The C. elegans uric-78 Gene Encodes a Protein Expressed in Motor Neu- rons, 77, 703-711
E. F. Stanley Single Calcium Channels and Acetylcholine Release at a Presynaptic Nerve Terminal, 77, ‘1007-1011
Acetylchdine receptor Z. W. Hall and J. R. Sanes Review: Synaptic Structure and Development: The Neuromuscular Junc- tion, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 99-121
K. R. Wagner, J. B. Cohen, and R. L. Huganir The 87K Postsynaptic Membrane Protein from Torpedo Is a Protein- Tyrosine Kinase Substrate Homologous to Dystrophin, 70, 511-522
A. B. Vernallis, W. C. Conroy, and D. K. Berg Neurons Assemble Acetylcholine Receptors with as Many as Three Kinds of Subunits While Maintaining Subunit Segregation among Receptor Subtypes, 70, 451-464
C. E. Stansfeld, S. J. Marsh, A. J. Gibb, and D. A. Brown Identification of M-Channels in Outside-Out Patches Excised from Sym- pathetic Ganglion Cells, 70, 639-654
M. M. Maimone and J. P. Merlie Interaction of the 43 kd Postsynaptic Protein with All Subunits of the Muscle Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, 77, 53-66
W. Hoch, M. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, Z. W. Hall, and R. H. Scheller Developmental Regulation of Highly Active Alternatively Spliced Forms of Agrin, 77, 479-490
M. J. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, W. Hoch, R. H. Scheller, and Z. Hall The Ability of Agrin to Cluster AChRs Depends on Alternative Splicing and on Cell Surface Proteoglycans, 77,491-502
R. J. Balice-Gordon, C. K. Chua, C. C. Nelson, and J. W. Lichtman Gradual Loss of Synaptic Cartels Precedes Axon Withdrawal at Devel- oping Neuromuscular Junctions, 77, 801-815
Acetylcholinesterase M. E. Fuentes and P. Taylor Control of Acetylcholinesterase Gene Expression during Myogenesis, 70, 679-687
B. J. Jasmin, R. K. Lee, and R. L. Rotundo Compartmentalization of Acetylcholinesterase mRNA and Enzyme at the Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction, 77, 467-477
Actin filament C. Rosenmund and G. L. Westbrook Calcium-Induced Actin Depolymerization Reduces NMDA Channel Ac- tivity, 70, 805-814
C.-B. Chien, D. E. Rosenthal, W. A. Harris, and C. E. Holt Navigational Errors Made by Growth Cones without Filopodia in the Embryonic Xenopus Brain, 77, 237-251
Active zone R. Robitaille, M. L. Garcia, G. J. Kaczorowski, and M. P. Charlton Functional Colocalization of Calcium and CalciumCated Potassium Chan- nels in Control of Transmitter Release, 77, 645-655
Activin J. N. Coulombe, R. Schwall, A. S. Parent, F. P. Eckenstein, and R. Nishi Induction of Somatostatin lmmunoreactivity in Cultured Ciliary Gan- glion Neurons by Activin in Choroid Cell-Conditioned Medium, 70, 899-906
Adaptation P. C. Gillespie, M. C. Wagner, and A. J. Hudspeth Identification of a 120 kd Hair-Bundle Myosin Located Near Stereociliary Tips, 77, 581-594
Adenosine receptor D. J. Mogul, M. E. Adams, and A. P. Fox Differential Activation of Adenosine Receptors Decreases N-type but Potentiates P-type Ca*+ Current in Hippocampal CA3 Neurons, 70,327- 334
Adenosine trisphophate I. Bezprozvanny and B. E. Ehrlich ATP Modulates the Function of lnositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate-Gated Chan- nels at Two Sites, 70, 1175-1184
Adenylyl cyclase H. R. Bourne and R. Nicoll Review: Molecular Machines Integrate Coincident Synaptic Signals, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (Suppl.), 65-75
R. Andrade Enhancement of P-Adrenergic Responses by G-Linked Receptors in Rat Hippocampus, 70,83-88
E. A. Schwartz L-Glutamate Conditionally Modulates the K+ Current of Mi.iller Glial Cells, 70, 1141-1149
Addiction E. J. Nestler, B. T. Hope, and K. L. Widnell Review: Drug Addiction: A Model for the Molecular Basis of Neural Plasticity, 77, 995-1006
Adhesion B. M. Gumbiner Review: Proteins Associated with the Cytoplasmic Surface of Adhesion Molecules, 77, 551-564
P. Pesheva, G. Gennarini, C. Coridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-160/180, 70, 69-82
T. Briimmendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. TQrnok, and F. C. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe- cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
P. Diamond, A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, J. Booth, L. Park, T. P. O’Con- nor, and D. G. Jay Fasciclin I and II Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 77, 409-421
G. Morales, M. Hubert, T. Briimmendorf, U. Treubert, A. TArnok, U. Schwarz, and F. G Rathjen Induction of Axonal Growth by Heterophilic Interactions between the Cell Surface Recognition Proteins Fll and Nr-CAM/Bravo, 77,1113-1122
Agrin K. R. Wagner, J. 8. Cohen, and R. L. Huganir The 87K Postsynaptic Membrane Protein from Torpedo Is a Protein- Tyrosine Kinase Substrate Homologous to Dystrophin, 70, 511-522
W. Hoch, M. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, Z. W. Hall, and R. H. Scheller Developmental Regulation of Highly Active Alternatively Spliced Forms of Agrin, 77, 479-490
M. J. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, W. Hoch, R. H. Scheller, and Z. Hall The Ability of Agrin to Cluster AChRs Depends on Alternative Splicing and on Cell Surface Proteoglycans, 77,491-502
Alternative splicing T. Timmusk, K. Palm, M. Metsis, T. Reintam, V. Paalme, M. Saarma, and H. Persson Multiple Promoters Direct Tissue-Specific Expression of the Rat BDNF Gene, 70,475-489
B. Borowsky, i. Mezey, and B. J. Hoffman Two GlycineTransporter Variants with Distinct Localization in the CNS and Peripheral Tissues Are Encoded by a Common Gene, 70,851-863
M. Hollmann, J. Boulter, C. Maron, L. Beasley, J. Sullivan, G. Pecht, and S. Heinemann Zinc Potentiates Agonist-Induced Currents at Certain Splice Variants of the NMDA Receptor, 70, 943-954
Alzheimer’s disease M. P. Mattson, B. Cheng, A. R. Culwell, F. 5. Esch, I. Lieberburg, and R. E. Rydel Evidence for Excitoprotectiveand lntraneuronal Calcium-Regulating Roles for Secreted Forms of the B-Amyloid Precursor Protein, 10, 243-254
M. Morishima-Kawashima, M. Hasegawa, K. Takio, M. Suzuki, K. Titani, and Y. lhara Ubiquitin IsConjugatedwithAmino-TerminallyProcessedTau inPaired Helical Filaments, 70, 1151-1168
C. T. Bramblett, M. Coedert, R. lakes, S. E. Merrick, J. Q. Trojanowski, and V. M.-Y. Lee Abnormal Tau Phosphorylation at Ser 396 in Alzheimer’s Disease Recapit- ulates Development and Contributes to Reduced Microtubule Binding, 70, 1089-1099
j. Biernat, N. Gustke, G. Drewes, E.-M. Mandelkow, and E. Mandelkow Phosphorylation of SerZQ Strongly Reduces Binding of Tau to Microtu- bules: Distribution between PHF-like lmmunoreactivity and Microtu- bule Binding, 77, 153-163
G. W. Rebeck, j. S. Reiter, D. K. Strickland, and B. T. Hyman Apolipoprotein E in Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease: Allelic Variation and Receptor Interactions, 77, 575-588
Ambystoma tigrinum J. S. Diamond and D. R. Copenhagen The Contribution of NMDA and Non-NMDA Receptors to the Light- Evoked Input-Output Characteristics of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77,725- 738
Amiloride T. A. Gilbertson, S. D. Roper, and S. C. Kinnamon Proton Currents through Amiloride-Sensitive Na+ Channels in Isolated Hamster Taste Cells: Enhancement by Vasopressin and CAMP, 70,931- 942
AMPAkainate receptor R. Schneggenburger, Z. Zhou, A. Konnerth, and E. Neher Fractional Contribution of Calcium to the Cation Current through Glu- tamate Receptor Channels, 77,133-143
S. D. Donevan and M. A. Rogawski CYKI 52466,a2,SBenzodiazepine, Isa Highly Selective, Noncompetitive Antagonist of AMPA/Kainate Receptor Responses, 70, 51-59
K. M. Partin, D. K. Patneau, C. A. Winters, M. L. Mayer, and A. Buonanno SelectiveModulation of Desensitization at AMPAversus Kainate Recep tors by Cyclothiazide and Concanavalin A, 77, 1869-1882
AMPA receptor A. M. Craig, C. D. Blackstone, R. L. Huganir, and G. Banker The Distribution of Glutamate Receptors in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons: PostsynapticClusteringofAMPA-SelectiveSubunits, 70,1055- 1068
S. Herlitze, M. Raditsch, J. P. Ruppersberg, W. Jahn, H. Monyer, R. Schoepfer, and V. Witzemann Argiotoxin Detects Molecular Differences in AMPA Receptor Channels, 70,1131-1140
L. 0. Trussell, S. Zhang, and I. M. Raman Desensitization of AMPA Receptors upon Multiquantal Neurotransmit- ter Release, 70, 1185-1196
D. 1. Linden, M. Smeyne, and J. A. Connor Induction of Cerebellar Long-Term Depression in Culture Requires Post- synaptic Action of Sodium Ions, 77, 1093-1188
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis V. E. Koliatsos, R. E. Clatterbuck, j. W. Winslow, M. H. Cayouette, and D. L. Price Evidence That Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is a Trophic Factor for Motor Neurons In Vivo, 70, 359-367
Aplysia californica B.-K. Kaang, E. R. Kandel, and S. C. N. Grant Activation of CAMP-Responsive Genes by Stimuli That Produce Long Term Facilitation in Aplysia Sensory Neurons, 70, 427-435
Y. Hu, A. Barzilai, M. Chen, C. H. Bailey, and E. R. Kandel
5-HT and CAMP Induce the Formation of Coated Pits and Vesicles and Increase the Expression of Clathrin Light Chain in Sensory Neurons of Aplysia, 70, 921-929
S. Schacher, E. R. Kandel, and P.-G. Montarolo CAMP and Arachidonic Acid Simulate Long-Term Structural and Func- tional Changes Produced by Neurotransmitters in Aplysia Sensory Neu- rons, 70, 1079-1088
Apoptosis G.-Q. Chang, Y. Hao, and F. Wong Apoptosis: Final Common Pathway of Photoreceptor Death in rd, rds, and Rhodopsin Mutant Mice, 77, 595-605
J. A. Kessler, W. H. Ludlam, M. M. Freidin, D. H. Hall, M. D. Michaelson, D. C. Spray, M. Dougherty, and D. K. Batter Cytokine-Induced Programmed Death of Cultured Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1123-1132
Arachidonic acid D. D. Fraser, K. Hoehn, S. Weiss, and B. A. MacVicar Arachidonic Acid Inhibits Sodium Currents and Synaptic Transmission in Cultured Striatal Neurons, 77, 633-644
S. Schacher, E. R. Kandel, and P.-C. Montarolo CAMP and Arachidonic Acid Simulate Long-Term Structural and Func- tional Changes Produced by Neurotransmitters in Aplysia Sensory Neu- rons, 70, 1079-1088
Argiotoxin S. Herlitze, M. Raditsch, J. P. Ruppersberg, W. Jahn, H. Monyer, R. Schoepfer, and V. Witzemann Argiotoxin Detects Molecular Differences in AMPA Receptor Channels, 70,1131-1140
Astrocyte S. W. Levison and J. E. Goldman Both Oligodendrocytes and Astrocytes Develop from Progenitors in the Subventricular Zone of Postnatal Rat Forebrain, 70, 201-212
Auditory system P. C. Gillespie, M. C. Wagner, and A. J. Hudspeth Identification of a 120 kd Hair-Bundle Myosin Located Near Stereociliary Tips, 77, 581-594
Autapse Z. Z. Pan, G. Tong, and C. E. Jahr A False Transmitter at Excitatory Synapses, 11, 85-91
Autoreceptor N. A. Lambert and W. A. Wilson Heterogeneity in Presynaptic Regulation of GABA Release from Hippo- campal Inhibitory Neurons, 77, 1057-1867
Axonal growth P. Pesheva, G. Gennarini, C. Goridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-160/180, 70, 69-82
T. Briimmendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. Tarnok, and F. G. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
H. Simon and A. Lumsden Rhombomere-Specific Origin of the Contralateral Vestibulo-Acoustic Efferent Neurons and Their Migration across the Embryonic Midline, 77, 209-220
G. Morales, M. Hubert, T. Brummendorf, U. Treubert, A. Tdrnok, U. Schwarz, and F. G Rathjen Induction of Axonal Growth by Heterophilic Interactions between the Cell Surface Recognition Proteins Fll and Nr-CAM/Bravo, 77,1113-1122
Axonal guidance C. S. Goodman and C. J. Shatz Review: Developmental Mechanisms That Generate Precise Patterns of Neuronal Connectivity, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 77-98
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
E. Frank and P. Wenner Review: Environmental Specification of Neuronal Connectivity, 10,779- 785
D. D. M. O’Leary and S. E. Koester Review: Development of Projection Neuron Types, Axon Pathways, and Patterned Connections of the Mammalian Cortex, 70, 991-1006
Y. v. Boxberg, S. Deiss, and U. Schwarz Guidance and Topographic Stabilization of Nasal Chick Retinal Axons on Target-Derived Components In Vitro, 70, 345-357
D. W. Sretavan and L. F. Reichardt Time-Lapse Video Analysis of Retinal Ganglion Cell Axon Pathfinding at the Mammalian Optic Chiasm: Growth Cone Guidance Using Intrinsic Chiasm Cues, 70, 761-777
C.-B. Chien, D. E. Rosenthal, W. A. Harris, and C. E. Holt Navigational Errors Made by Growth Cones without Filopodia in the Embryonic Xenopus Brain, 77, 237-251
A. Wizenmann, E. Thies, S. Kkrstermann, F. Bonhoeffer, and M. BBhr Appearance of Target-Specific Guidance Information for Regenerating Axons after CNS Lesions, 77, 975-983
Axonal projection D. J. Merritt, .A Hawken, and P. M. Whitington The Role of the cut Gene in the Specification of Central Projections by Sensory Axons in Drosophila, 70, 741-752
Axonal transport A. Mikami, B. M. Paschal, M. Mazumdar, and R. B. Vallee Molecular Cloning of the Retrograde Transport Motor Cytopfasmic Dyn- ein (MAP IC), 70, 787-796
Axon commissure M. Seeger, C. Tear, D. Ferres-Marco, and C. S. Goodman Mutations Affecting Growth Cone Guidance in Drosophila: Genes Nec- essary for Guidance toward or away from the Midline, 70, 409-426
Baclofen N. A. Lambert and W. A. Wilson Heterogeneity in Presynaptic Regulation of GABA Release from Hippo- campal Inhibitory Neurons, 77, 1057-1067
BAPTA M. Tymianski, M. C. Wallace, I. Spigelman, M. Uno, P. L. Carlen, C. H. Tator, and M. P. Charlton Cell-Permeant Ca*+ Chelators Reduce Early Excitotoxic and lschemic Neuronal Injury In Vitro and In Vivo, 77, 221-235
J. Shin, E. A. Richard, and J. E. Lisman Ca2* Is an Obligatory Intermediate in the Excitation Cascadeof Limulus Photoreceptors, 7’7, 84.5-855
Basal gangiion P. Calabresi, A. Pisani, N. B. Mercuri, and G. Bernardi Lithium Treatment Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Stria- turn, 70, 955-962
S.-H. Li, G. Schilling, W. S. Young Ill, X.-J. Li, R. L. Margolis, 0. C. Stine, M. V. Wagster, M. H. Abbott, M. L. Franz, N. G. Ranen, S. E. Folstein, J. C. Hedreen, and C. A. Ross Huntington’s Disease Gene (IT151 Is Widely Expressed in Human and Rat Tissues, 77, 985-993
Basket cell P. Vincent and A. Marty Neighboring Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Communicate via Retrograde Inhibition of Common Presynaptic Interneurons, 77, 885-893
bendless gene M. G. Muralidhar and J. B. Thomas The Drosophila bendless Gene Encodes a Neural Protein Related to Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, 77, 253-266
Benzodiazepine C. F. Zorumski, K. A. Yamada, M. T. Price, and J. W. Olney A Benzodiazepine Recognition Site Associated with the Non-NMDA Glutamate Receptor, 70, 61-67
S. D. Donevan and M. A. Rogawski CYKI 52466, a Z,ZBenzodiazepine, Is a Highly Selective, Noncompetitive Antagonist of AMPA/Kainate Receptor Responses, 70, 51-59
fi-Adrenergic receptor R. Andrade Enhancement of B-Adrenergic Responses by C,-Linked Receptors in Rat Hippocampus, 10, 83-88
BAmyloid G. W. Rebeck, J. S. Reiter, D. K. Strickland, and B. T. Hyman Apolipoprotein E in Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease: Allelic Variation and Receptor Interactions, 77, 575-580
p-Amyloid precursor protein M. P. Mattson, B. Cheng, A. R. Culwell, F. S. Esch, I. Lieberburg, and R. E. Rydel Evidence for Excitoprotective and lntraneuronal Calcium-Regulating Roles for Secreted Forms of the B-Amyloid Precursor Protein, 70, 243-254
Bleaching J. Jin, R. K. Crouch, D. W. Corson, B. M. Katz, E. F. MacNichol, and M. C. Cornwall Noncovalent Occupancy of the Retinal-Binding Pocket of Opsin Dimin- ishes Bleaching Adaptation of Retinal Cones, 77. 513-522
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) N. K. Mahanthappa and G. A. Schwarting Peptide Growth Factor Control of Olfactory Neurogenesis and Neuron Survival In Vitro: Roles of EGF and TNF-Bs, 70, 293-305
N. Y. Ip, T. N. Stitt, P. Tapley, R. Klein, D. J. Glass, J. Fandl, L. A. Greene, M. Barbacid, and G. D. Yancopoulos Similarities and Differences in the Way Neurotrophins Interact with the Trk Receptors in Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells, 70, 137-149
T. Timmusk, K. Palm, M. Metsis, T. Reintam, V. Paalme, M. Saarma, and H. Persson Multiple Promoters Direct TissueSpecific Expression of the Rat BDNF Gene, 70, 475-489
D. R. Kaplan, K. Matsumoto, E. Lucarelli, and C. J. Thiele Induction of TrkB by Retinoic Acid Mediates Biologic Responsiveness to BDNF and Differentiation of Human Neuroblastoma Cells, 77, 321- 331
Brn-2 H. Fujii and H. Hamada A CNS-Specific POU Transcription Factor, Brn-2, Is Required for Estab- lishing Mammalian Neural Cell Lineages, 77, 1197-1206
Cadherin B. M. Gumbiner Review: Proteins Associated with the Cytoplasmic Surface of Adhesion Molecules, 77, 551-564
Caenorhabditis elegans K. Gengyo-Ando, Y. Kamiya, A. Yamakawa, K.-i. Kodaira, K. Nishiwaki, J. Miwa, I. Hori, and R. Hosono The C. elegans uric-78 Gene Encodes a Protein Expressed in Motor Neu- rons, 77, 703-711
Caged calcium D. Bruns, F. Engert, and H.-D. Lux A Fast Activating Presynaptic Reuptake Current during Serotonergic Transmission in Identified Neurons of Hirudo, 70, 559-572
P. Thomas, J. G. Wong, A. K. Lee, and W. Almers A Low Affinity Ca*’ Receptor Controls the Final Steps in Peptide Secre- tion from Pituitary Melanotrophs, 77, 93-104
Calcium E. Neher and R. S. Zucker Multiple Calcium-Dependent Processes Related to Secretion in Bovine Chromaffin Cells, 70, 21-30
L. S. Lerea and J. 0. McNamara lonotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes Activate c-fos Transcription by Distinct Calcium-Requiring Intracellular Signaling Pathways, IO, 31- 41
J. H. Weiss, D. M. Hartley, J.-y. Koh, and D. W. Choi AMPA Receptor Activation Potentiates Zinc Neurotoxicity, 70, 43-49
Y.-y. Peng and R. S. Zucker Release of LHRH Is Linearly Related to the Time Integral of Presynaptic CaZ+ Elevation above a Threshold Level in Bullfrog Sympathetic Ganglia, 10, 465-473
M. Kohler, N. Burnashev, B. Sakmann, and P. H. Seeburg Determinants of Ca* Permeability in Both TM1 and TM2 of High Affinity Kainate Receptor Channels: Diversity by RNA Editing, 10,491-588
M. P. Gray-Keller, A. S. Polans, K. Palczewski, and P. B. Detwiler The Effect of Recoverin-like Calcium-Binding Proteins on the Photore- sponse of Retinal Rods, 10, 523-531
A. Wieraszko, G. Li, E. Kornecki, M. V. Hogan, and Y. H. Ehrlich Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus Induced by Platelet-Acti- vating Factor, 10, 553-557
M. Cola and M. Crest Colocalization of Active KCa Channels and Caz+ Channels within Ca2+ Domains in Helix Neurons, 70, 689-699
B. D. Johnson and L. Byerly A Cytoskeletal Mechanism for Ca *+ Channel Metabolic Dependence and Inactivation by Intracellular Ca*+, 70, 797-884
Z. Dai and H. B. Peng Elevation in Presynaptic Ca*+ Level Accompanying Initial Nerve-Muscle Contact in Tissue Culture, 70, 827-837
L. R. Funte and P. G. Haydon Synaptic Target Contact Enhances Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Activat- ing cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase during Synaptogenesis, 10,1069- 1078
M. Tymianski, M. C. Wallace, I. Spigelman, M. Uno, P. L. Carlen, C. H. Tator, and M. P. Charlton Cell-Permeant Ca2+ Chelators Reduce Early Excitotoxic and lschemic Neuronal Injury In Vitro and In Vivo, 11, 221-235
R. Robitaille, M. L. Garcia, G. J. Kaczorowski, and M. P. Charlton Functional Colocalization of Calcium and Calcium-Gated Potassium Chan- nels in Control of Transmitter Release, 11, 645-655
J. B. Brocard, S. Rajdev, and I. J. Reynolds Glutamate-Induced Increases in Intracellular FreeMg*+in Cultured Cor- tical Neurons, 11, 751-757
J. Shin, E. A. Richard, and J. E. Lisman Ca2+ Is an Obligatory Intermediate in the Excitation Cascade of Limulus Photoreceptors, 11, 845-855
P. Vincent and A. Marty Neighboring Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Communicate via Retrograde Inhibition of Common Presynaptic Interneurons, 17, 885-893
Calcium/cahnodulindependent protein kinase L. C. Griffith, L. M. Verselis, K. M. Aitken, C. P. Kyriacou, W. Danho, and R. J. Greenspan Inhibition of Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase in Dro- sophila Disrupts Behavioral Plasticity, 10, Sol-509
Calcium-binding protein 0. Pongs, J. Lindemeier, X. R. Zhu, T. Theil, D. Engelkamp, I. Krah- Jentgens, H.-G. Lambrecht, K. W. Koch, J. Schwemer, R. Rivosecchi, A. Mallart, J. Galceran, I. Canal, J. A. Barbas, and A. Ferrus Frequenin-A Novel Calcium-Binding Protein That Modulates Synaptic Efficacy in the Drosophila Nervous System, 71, 15-28
Calcium channel M. S. Shapiro and B. Hille Substance P and Somatostatin Inhibit Calcium Channels in Rat Sympa- thetic Neurons via Different C Protein Pathways, 10, II-20
J. Yang and R. W. Tsien Enhancement of N- and L-type Calcium Channel Currents by Protein Kinase C in Frog Sympathetic Neurons, 10, 127-136
D. J. Mogul, M. E. Adams, and A. P. Fox Differential Activation of Adenosine Receptors Decreases N-type but Potentiates P-type Ca*+ Current in Hippocampal CA3 Neurons, 10,327- 334
L. Forti and D. Pietrobon Functional Diversity of L-type Calcium Channels in Rat Cerebellar Neu- rons, 70,437-450
W. A. Twitchell and S. C. Rane Opioid Peptide Modulation of Ca”-Dependent K+ and Voltage-Activated Ca*+ Currents in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells, 10, 701-789
Y. Fujita, M. Mynlieff, R. T. Dirksen, M.-S. Kim, T. Niidome, J. Nakai, T. Friedrich, N. Iwabe, T. Miyata, T. Furuichi, D. Furutama, K. Mikoshiba, Y. Mori, and K. G. Beam Primary Structure and Functional Expression of the o-Conotoxin-Sensi- tive N-type Calcium Channel from Rabbit Brain, 10, 585-598
M. Cola and M. Crest Colocalization of Active KCa Channels and CaZC Channels within Ca*+ Domains in Helix Neurons, 70, 689-699
B. D. Johnson and L. Byerly A Cytoskeletal Mechanism for Ca * Channel Metabolic Dependence and Inactivation by Intracellular Caz+, 10, 797-884
H. U. Zeilhofer, T. H. Miller, and D. Swandulla Inhibition of High Voltage-Activated Calcium Currents by L-Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Calcium Influx, 10, 879-887
I. M. Mintz and B. P. Bean GABAe Receptor Inhibition of P-type Ca*+ Channels in Central Neurons, 10,889-898
L. R. Funte and P. C. Haydon Synaptic Target Contact Enhances Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Activat- ing CAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase during Synaptogenesis, 10,1869- 1078
W. A. Sather, T. Tanabe, J.-F. Zhang, Y. Mori, M. E. Adams, and R. W. Tsien Distinctive Biophysical and Pharmacological Properties of Class A (BI) Calcium Channel a, Subunits, 11, 291-303
J. I. Luebke, K. Dunlap, and T. J. Turner Multiple Calcium Channel Types Control Glutamatergic SynapticTrans- mission in the Hippocampus, 11, 895-982
E. F. Stanley Single Calcium Channels and Acetylcholine Release at a Presynaptic Nerve Terminal, 71, 1887-1011
S. Tang, A. Yatani, A. Bahinski, Y. Mori, and A. Schwartz Molecular Localization of Regions in the L-type Calcium Channel Criti- cal for Dihydropyridine Action, 17, 1013-1021
Calcium channel clone W. A. Sather, T. Tanabe, J.-F. Zhang, Y. Mori, M. E. Adams, and R. W. Tsien Distinctive Biophysical and Pharmacological Properties of Class A (BI) Calcium Channel a, Subunits, 11, 291-303
Calcium current K. Hoehn, T. W. J. Watson, and B. A. MacVicar A Novel Tetrodotoxin-Insensitive, Slow Sodium Current in Striatal and Hippocampal Neurons, 10, 543-552
R. Schneggenburger, Z. Zhou, A. Konnerth, and E. Neher Fractional Contribution of Calcium to the Cation Current through Glu- tamate Receptor Channels, II, 133-143
Calciumdependent inactivation 8. D. Johnson and L. Byerly A Cytoskeletal Mechanism for Ca 2+ Channel Metabolic Dependence and Inactivation by Intracellular Ca2+, 10, 797-804
Calcium imaging D. J. Perkel, J. J. Petrozzino, R. A. Nicoll, and J. A. Connor The Role of Caz+ Entry via Synaptically Activated NMDA Receptors in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation, 11, 817-823
Calcium-gated potassium channel M. Cola and M. Crest Colocalization of Active KCa Channels and Ca” Channels within Ca2+ Domains in Helix Neurons, 10, 689-699
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
W. A. Twitchell and S. G. Rane Opioid Peptide Modulation of Ca*+-Dependent K+ and VoltageActivated Caz+ Currents in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells, 70, 701-789
R. Robitaille, M. L. Garcia, G. J. Kaczorowski, and M. P. Charlton Functional Colocalization of Calcium and Calcium-Gated Potassium Chan- nels in Control of Transmitter Release, 77, 645-655
Calmodulin H. U. Zeilhofer, T. H. MuJler, and D. Swandulla Inhibition of High Voltage-Activated Calcium Currents by L-Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Calcium Influx, 70, 879-887
T. Akasu, M. Ito,T. Nakano,C. R. Schneider, M.A. Simmons,T.Tanaka, T. Tokimasa, and M. Yoshida Myosin Light Chain Kinase Occurs in Bullfrog Sympathetic Neurons and May Modulate Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents, 77, 1133- 1145
CAMP R. Andrade Enhancement of Bhdrenergic Responses by G,-Linked Receptors in Rat Hippocampus, 70, 83-88
B. Mellstrom, J. R. Naranjo, N. S. Foulkes, M. Lafarga, and P. Sassone- Corsi Transcriptional Response to CAMP in Brain: Specific Distribution and Induction of CREM Antagonists, 10, 655-665
Y. Hu, A. Barzilai, M. Chen, C. H. Bailey, and E. R. Kandel 5-HT and CAMP Induce the Formation of Coated Pits and Vesicles and Increase the Expression of Clathrin Light Chain in Sensory Neurons of Aplysia, 70, 921-929
S. J. Kleene Origin of the Chloride Current in Olfactory Transduction, 77, 123-132
H. Hashimoto, T. Ishihara, R. Shigemoto, K. Mori, and S. Nagata Molecular Cloning and Tissue Distribution of a Receptor for Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide, 77, 333-342
T. W. Lovenberg, B. M. Baron, L. de Lecea, J. D. Miller, R. A. Prosser, M. A. Rea, P. E. Foye, M. Racke, A. L. Slone, 8. W. Siegel, P. E. Danielson, J. C. Sutcliffe, and M. C. Erlander A Novel Adenylyl Cyclase-Activating Serotonin Receptor (5HT7) Impli- cated in the Regulation of Mammalian Circadian Rhythms, 77,449-458
S. Schacher, E. R. Kandel, and P.-G. Montarolo CAMP and Arachidonic Acid Simulate Long-Term Structural and Func- tional Changes Produced by Neurotransmitters in Aplysia Sensory Neu- rons, 70, 1079-1088
CAMPdependent protein kinase L. R. Funte and P. C. Haydon Synaptic Target Contact Enhances Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Activat- ing CAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase during Synaptogenesis, 70,1069- 1078
CAMP response element (CRE) B.-K. Kaang, E. R. Kandel, and S. G. N. Grant Activation of CAMP-Responsive Genes by Stimuli That Produce Long- Term Facilitation in Aplysia Sensory Neurons, 70, 427-435
Catecholamine J. P. Hammang, R. R. Behringer, E. E. Baetge, R. D. Palmiter,R. L. Brinster, and A. Messing Oncogene Expression in Retinal Horizontal Cells of Transgenic Mice Results in a Cascade of Neurodegeneration, 70, 1197-1209
R. Bauerfeind, A. Regnier-Vigouroux, T. Flatmark, and W. 8. Huttner Selective Storage of Acetylcholine, but Not Catecholamines, in Neuro- endocrine Synaptic-like Microvesicles of Early Endosomal Origin, 77, 105-121
cDNA cloning B. Borowsky, E. Mezey, and B. J. Hoffman Two Glycine Transporter Variants with Distinct Localization in the CNS and Peripheral Tissues Are Encoded by a Common Gene, 70,851-863
Cell adhesion molecule B. M. Gumbiner Review: Proteins Associated with the Cytoplasmic Surface of Adhesion Molecules, 77, 551-564
P. Pesheva, C. Gennarini, C. Goridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-168/18B, 70, 69-82
T. Brummendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. Tarnok, and F. G. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe- cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
P. Diamond,A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, J. Booth, L. Park, T. P. Q’Con- nor, and D. G. Jay Fasciclin I and II Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 77,489-421
Cell death M. P. Mattson, B. Cheng, A. R. Culwell, F. S. Esch, I. Lieberburg, and R. E. Rydel Evidence for Excitoprotectiveand lntraneuronal Calcium-Regulating Roles for Secreted Forms of the B-Amyloid Precursor Protein, 70, 243-254
R. L. Buchanan and S. Benzer Defective Glia in the Drosophila Brain Degeneration Mutant drop-dead, 70, 839-850
G.-Q. Chang, Y. Hao, and F. Wong Apoptosis: Final Common Pathway of Photoreceptor Death in rd, rds, and Rhodopsin Mutant Mice, 17, 595-605
K. A. Wood, B. Dipasquale, and R. J. Youle In Situ Labeling of Granule Cells for Apoptosis-Associated DNA Frag- mentation Reveals Different Mechanisms of Cell Loss in Developing Cerebellum, 77, 621-632
Cell membrane Y. v. Boxberg, S. Deiss, and U. Schwarz Guidance and Topographic Stabilization of Nasal Chick Retinal Axons on Target-Derived Components In Vitro, 70, 345-357
Cell migration P. Pesheva, G. Gennarini, C. Goridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-168/180, 70, 69-82
H. Tomasiewicz, K. Ono, D. Yee, C. Thompson, C. Goridis, U. Rutis- hauser, and T. Magnuson Genetic Deletion of a Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule Variant (N-CAM- 180) Produces Distinct Defects in the Central Nervous System, 77,1163- 1174
Cell recognition Z. Dai and H. B. Peng Elevation in Presynaptic Ca2+ Level Accompanying Initial Nerve-Muscle Contact in Tissue Culture, 70, 827-837
Cerebellum L. Forti and D. Pietrobon Functional Diversity of L-type Calcium Channels tn Rat Cerebellar Neu- rons, 70,437-450
J. Oberdick, K. Schilling, R. J. Smeyne, J. C. Corbin, C. Bocchiaro, and J. I. Morgan Control of Segment-like Patterns of Gene Expression in the Mouse Cere- bellum, 70, 1087-1018
I. Bezprozvanny and B. E. Ehrlich ATP Modulates the Function of lnositol 1,4,5-TrisphosphateGated Chan- nels at Two Sites, 70, 1175-1184
S. F. Traynelis, R. A. Silver, and S. G. Cull-Candy Estimated Conductanceof Glutamate Receptor Channels Activated dur- ing EPSCs at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Synapse, 77,279- 289
M. Sarantis, L. Ballerini, B. Miller, R.A. Silver, M. Edwards, and D. Attwell Glutamate Uptake from the Synaptic Cleft Does Not Shape the Decay of the Non-NMDA Component of the Synaptic Current, 77, 541-549
K. A. Wood, B. Dipasquale, and R. J. Youle In Situ Labeling of Granule Cells for Apoptosishssociated DNA Frag- mentation Reveals Different Mechanisms of Cell Loss in Developing Cerebellum, 77, 621-632
A. Baude, 2. Nusser, J. D. B. Roberts, E. Mulvihill, R. A. J. Mcllhinney, and P. Somogyi The Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor (mGluRla) Is Concentrated at Perisynaptic Membrane of Neuronal Subpopulations as Detected by lmmunogold Reaction, 77, 771-787
B. Barbour Synaptic Currents Evoked in Purkinje Cells by Stimulating Individual Granule Cells, 77, 759-769
P. Vincent and A. Marty Neighboring Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Communicate via Retrograde Inhibition of Common Presynaptic Interneurons, 77, 885-893
S.-H. Li, C. Schilling, W. S. Young Ill, X.-J. Li, R. L. Margolis, 0. C. Stine, M. V. Wagster, M. H. Abbott, M. L. Franz, N. G. Ranen, S. E. Folstein, J. C. Hedreen, and C. A. Ross Huntington’s Disease Gene (IT15) Is Widely Expressed in Human and Rat Tissues, 77, 985-993
C-h
L. S. Lerea and J. 0. McNamara lonotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes Activate c-fos Transcription by Distinct Calcium-Requiring Intracellular Signaling Pathways, 70, 31- 41
J. j. Lucas, B. Mellstrom, M. I. Colado, and J. R. Naranjo Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: SerotoninlA Receptor Agonists Trigger Transactivation by c-fos of the Prodynorphin Gene in Spinal Cord Neu- rons, 70, 599-611
B. Mellstrom, J. R. Naranjo, N. S. Foulkes, M. Lafarga, and P. Sassone- Corsi Transcriptional Response to CAMP in Brain: Specific Distribution and Induction of CREM Antagonists, 70, 655-665
K. Yoshida, K. Kawamura, and J. lmaki Consistent Expression of c-fos mRNA in Rat Retinal Cells: Regulation by Light/Dark Cycle, 70,1849-1054
J. Takeuchi, W. Shannon, N. Aronin, and W. J. Schwartz Compositional Changes of AP-1 DNA-Binding Proteins Are Regulated by Light in a Mammalian Circadian Clock, 77, 825-836
cCMP phosphodiesterase J. K. Angleson and T. C. Wensel A GTPaseAccelerating Factor for Transducin, Distinct from Its Effector cGMP Phosphodiesterase, in Rod Outer Segment Membranes, 77,939- 949
Channel blocker S. Herlitze, M. Raditsch, J. P. Ruppersberg, W. Jahn, H. Monyer, R. Schoepfer, and V. Witzemann Argiotoxin Detects Molecular Differences in AMPA Receptor Channels, 70,1131-1148
M. J. Root and R. MacKinnon Identification of an External Divalent Cation-Binding Site in the Pore of a cCMP-Activated Channel, 77, 459-466
Channel localization R. Robitaille, M. L. Garcia, G. J. Kaczorowski, and M. P. Charlton Functional Colocalization of Calcium and Calcium-Gated Potassium Chan- nels in Control of Transmitter Release, 77, 645-655
Chloride channel C. Fahlke, E. Zachar, and R. Rude1 Chloride Channels with Reduced Single-Channel Conductance in Re- cessive Myotonia Congenita, 70, 225-232
Chloride current S. J. Kleene Origin of the Chloride Current in Olfactory Transduction, 77,123-132
Choroid J. N. Coulombe, R. Schwall, A. S. Parent, F. P. Eckenstein, and R. Nishi Induction of Somatostatin lmmunoreactivity in Cultured Ciliary Can- glion Neurons by Activin in Choroid Cell-Conditioned Medium, 70, 899-906
Chromaffin cell E. Neher and R. S. Zucker Multiple Calcium-Dependent Processes Related to Secretion in Bovine Chromaffin Cells, 70, 21-30
W. A. Twitchell and S. G. Rane Opioid Peptide Modulation of Ca*+-Dependent K’ and Voltage-Activated Ca2+ Currents in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells, 70, 701-789
Ciliary ganglion A. B. Vernallis, W. C. Conroy, and D. K. Berg Neurons Assemble Acetylcholine Receptors with as Many as Three Kinds of Subunits While Maintaining Subunit Segregation among Receptor Subtypes, 70, 451-464
J. N. Coulombe, R. Schwall, A. S. Parent, F. P. Eckenstein, and R. Nishi Induction of Somatostatin lmmunoreactivity in Cultured Ciliary Gan- glion Neurons by Activin in Choroid Cell-Conditioned Medium, 70, 899-906
Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) N. Y. Ip, J. McClain, N. X. Barrezueta, T. H. Aldrich, L. Pan, Y. Li, S. J. Wiegand, B. Friedman, S. Davis, and C. D. Yancopoulos The a Component of the CNTF Receptor Is Required for Signaling and Defines Potential CNTF Targets in the Adult and during Development, 70, 89-102
J. A. Kessler, W. H. Ludlam, M. M. Freidin, D. H. Hall, M. D. Michaelson, D. C. Spray, M. Dougherty, and D. K. Batter Cytokine-Induced Programmed Death of Cultured Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1123-1132
Cilium S. J. Kleene Origin of the Chloride Current in Olfactory Transduction, 77, 123-132
Circadian oscillator C. M. Cahill and J. C. Besharse Circadian Clock Functions Localized in Xenopus Retinal Photorecep tors, 70, 573-577
Circadian rhythm M. E. Pierce, H. Sheshberadaran, Z. Zhang, L. E. Fox, M. L. Applebury, and J. S. Takahashi Circadian Regulation of lodopsin Gene Expression in Embryonic Photo- receptors in Retinal Cell Culture, 70, 579-584
K. Yoshida, K. Kawamura, and J. lmaki Consistent Expression of c-fos mRNA in Rat Retinal Cells: Regulation by Light/Dark Cycle, 70, 1849-1054
T. W. Lovenberg, B. M. Baron, L. de Lecea, J. D. Miller, R. A. Prosser, M. A. Rea, P. E. Foye, M. Racke, A. L. Slone, B. W. Siegel, P. E. Danielson, J. C. Sutcliffe, and M. G. Erlander A Novel Adenylyl CyclaseActivating Serotonin Receptor (SHTZJ Impli- cated in the Regulation of Mammalian Circadian Rhythms, 77,449-458
Clathrin Y. Hu, A. Barzilai, M. Chen, C. H. Bailey, and E. R. Kandel 5-HT and CAMP Induce the Formation of Coated Pits and Vesicles and Increase the Expression of Clathrin Light Chain in Sensory Neurons of Aplysia, 70, 921-929
Coated vesicle Y. Hu, A. Barzilai, M. Chen, C. H. Bailey, and E. R. Kandel 5HT and CAMP Induce the Formation of Coated Pits and Vesicles and Increase the Expression of Clathrin Light Chain in Sensory Neurons of Aplysia, 70, 921-929
Cone cell W. Bonigk, W. Altenhofen, F. Mtiller, A. Dose, M. Illing, R. S. Molday, and U. 8. Kaupp Rod and Cone Photoreceptor Cells Express Distinct Genes for cGMP- Gated Channels, 70, 865-877
Cortical development D. D. M. O’Leary and S. E. Koester Review: Development of Projection Neuron Types, Axon Pathways, and Patterned Connections of the Mammalian Cortex, 70, 991-1886
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Cortical map G. M. Edelman Review: Neural Darwinism: Selection and Reentrant Signaling in Higher Brain Function, 70, 115-125
Corticotropin-releasing factor C.-P. Chang, R. V. Pearse II, S. O’Connell, and M. G. Rosenfeld Identification of a Seven Transmembrane Helix Receptor for Corticotro- pin-Releasing Factor and Sauvagine in Mammalian Brain, 77,1187-1195
cut locus D. J. Merritt, A. Hawken, and P. M. Whitington The Role of the cut Gene in the Specification of Central Projections by Sensory Axons in Drosophila, 70, 741-752
Cyclic nucleotidqated channel W. Bon&k, W. Altenhofen, F. Miiller, A. Dose, M. Illing, R. S. Molday, and U. 8. Kaupp Rod and Cone Photoreceptor Cells Express Distinct Genes for cCMP- Gated Channels, 70, 865-877
M. J. Root and R. MacKinnon Identification of an External Divalent Cation-Binding Site in the Pore of a cCMP-Activated Channel, 77, 459-466
Cyclothiazide K. M. Partin, D. K. Patneau, C. A. Winters, M. L. Mayer, and A. Buonanno Selective Modulation of Desensitization at AMPAversus Kainate Recep- tors by Cyclothiazide and Concanavalin A, 77, 1869-1882
Cytochalasin C.-B. Chien, D. E. Rosenthal, W. A. Harris, and C. E. Holt Navigational Errors Made by Growth Cones without Filopodia in the Embryonic Xenopus Brain, 77, 237-251
Cytokine P. H. Patterson and H. Nawa Review: Neuronal Differentiation FactorsQtokines and Synaptic Plas- ticity, Cell 72//veuron 70 (SuppI.), 123-137
M. S. Rao, Y. Sun, J. L. Escary, J. Perreau, S. Tresser, P. H. Patterson, R. E. Zigmond, P. Brulet, and S. C. Landis Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Mediates an Injury Response but Not aTar- get-Directed Developmental Transmitter Switch in Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1175-1185
Cytokine receptor N. Y. Ip, J. McClain, N. X. Barrezueta, T. H. Aldrich, L. Pan, Y. Li, S. J. WieRand, 8. Friedman, S. Davis, and C. D. Yancopoulos The; Component of the CNTF Receptor Is Required for Signaling and Defines Potential CNTF Targets in the Adult and during Development, 70, 89-102
Cytoskeleton K. R. Wagner, J. B. Cohen, and R. L. Huganir The 87K Postsynaptic Membrane Protein from Torpedo Is a Protein- Tyrosine Kinase Substrate Homologous to Dystrophin, 70, 511-522
B. D. Johnson and L. Byerly A Cytoskeletal Mechanism for Ca 2+ Channel Metabolic Dependence and Inactivation by Intracellular Ca*, 70, 797-884
C. Rosenmund and G. L. Westbrook Calcium-Induced Actin Depolymerization Reduces NMDA Channel Ac- tivity, 70, 805-814
M. M. Maimone and J. P. Merlie Interaction of the 43 kd Postsynaptic Protein with All Subunits of the Muscle Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, 77, 53-66
M. E. Adams, M. H. Butler, T. M. Dryer, M. F. Peters, A. A. Murnane, and S. C. Froehner Two Forms of Mouse Syntrophin, a 58 kd Dystrophin-Associated Pro- tein, Differ in Primary Structure and Tissue Distribution, 77, 531-548
Dark adaptation J. Jin, R. K. Crouch, D. W. Corson, B. M. Katz, E. F. MacNichol, and M. C. Cornwall Noncovalent Occupancy of the Retinal-Binding Pocket of Opsin Dimin- ishes Bleaching Adaptation of Retinal Cones, 77, 513-522
Degeneration V. E. Koliatsos, R. E. Clatterbuck, J. W. Winslow, M. H. Cayouette, and D. L. Price Evidence That Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is a Trophic Factor for Motor Neurons In Vivo, 70, 359-367
R. L. Buchanan and S. Benzer Defective Glia in the Drosophila Brain Degeneration Mutant drop-dead, 70, 839-850
Dendrite A. Peinado, R. Yuste, and L. C. Katz Extensive Dye Coupling between Rat Neocortical Neurons during the Period of Circuit Formation, 70, 103-114
A. M. Craig, C. D. Blackstone, R. L. Huganir, and C. Banker The Distribution of Glutamate Receptors in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons: PostsynapticClusteringof AMPA-SelectiveSubunits, 70,1055- 1068
W. Regehr, J. Kehoe, P. Ascher, and C. Armstrong Synaptically Triggered Action Potentials in Dendrites, 77, 145-151
Denervation J. S. Yang, P. B. Bennett, N. Makita, A. L. George, and R. L. Barchi Expression of the Sodium Channel J3, Subunit in Rat Skeletal Muscle Is Selectively Associated with the Tetrodotoxin-Sensitive a Subunit Iso- form, 77,915-922
Dentate gyrus neuron L. S. Lerea and J. 0. McNamara lonotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes Activate c-fos Transcription by Distinct Calcium-Requiring Intracellular Signaling Pathways, 70,31- 41
Depolarizing afterpotential K. Hoehn, T. W. J. Watson, and B. A. MacVicar A Novel Tetrodotoxin-Insensitive, Slow Sodium Current in Striatal and Hippocampal Neurons, 70, 543-552
Desensitization C. F. Zorumski, K. A. Yamada, M. T. Price, and J. W. Olney A Benzodiazepine Recognition Site Associated with the Non-NMDA Glutamate Receptor, 70, 61-67
L. 0. Trussell, S. Zhang, and I. M. Raman Desensitization of AMPA Receptors upon Multiquantal Neurotransmit- ter Release, 70, 1185-11%
K. M. Partin, D. K. Patneau, C. A. Winters, M. L. Mayer, and A. Buonanno Selective Modulation of Desensitization at AMPA versus Kainate Recep- tors by Cyclothiazide and Concanavalin A, 77, 1069-1882
S. Hestrin Different Glutamate Receptor Channels Mediate Fast Excitatory Synap- tic Currents in Inhibitory and Excitatory Cortical Neurons, 77, 1883- 1091
Desmosome B. M. Gumbiner Review: Proteins Associated with the Cytoplasmic Surface of Adhesion Molecules, 77, 551-564
Development C. S. Goodman and C. J. Shatz Review: Developmental Mechanisms That Generate Precise Patterns of Neuronal Connectivity, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 77-98
E. Frank and P. Wenner Review: Environmental Specification of Neuronal Connectivity, 70,779- 785
A. Peinado, R. Yuste, and L. C. Katz Extensive Dye Coupling between Rat Neocortical Neurons during the Period of Circuit Formation, 70, 103-114
S. W. Levison and J. E. Goldman Both Oligodendrocytes and Astrocytes Develop from Progenitors in the Subventricular Zone of Postnatal Rat Forebrain, 70, 201-212
T. J. Kilpatrick and P. F. Bartlett Cloning and Growthof Multipotential Neural Precursors: Requirements for Proliferation and Differentiation, 70, 255-265
K. Williams, S. L. Russell, Y. M. Shen, and P. B. Molinoff Developmental Switch in the Expression of NMDA Receptors Occurs In Vivo and In Vitro, IO, 267-278
R. A. Hughes, M. Sendtner, M. Coldfarb, D. Lindholm, and H. Thoenen Evidence That Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Is a Major Muscle-Derived Survival Factor for Cultured Spinal Motoneurons, 10, 369-377
M. Hoshino, F. Matsuzaki, Y.-i. Nabeshima, and C. Hama hikaru genki, a CNS-Specific Gene Identified by Abnormal Locomotion in Drosophila, Encodes a Novel Type of Protein, 70, 395-407
M. J. Carson, R. R. Behringer, R. L. Brinster, and F. A. McMorris Insulin-like Growth Factor I Increases Brain Growth and Central Ner- vous System Myelination in Transgenic Mice, 70, 729-740
R. Mooney, D. V. Madison, and C. J. Shatz Enhancement of Transmission at the Developing Retinogeniculate Syn- apse, 70, 815-825
J. Oberdick, K. Schilling, R. J. Smeyne, J. C. Corbin, C. Bocchiaro, and J. I. Morgan Control of Segment-like Patterns of Gene Expression in theMouse Cere- bellum, 70, 1007-1018
H. Simon and A. Lumsden Rhombomere-Specific Origin of the Contralateral Vestibulo-Acoustic Efferent Neurons and Their Migration across the Embryonic Midline, 11, 209-220
M. C. Muralidhar and J. B. Thomas The Drosophila bendless Gene Encodes a Neural Protein Related to Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, 77, 253-266
K. M. Walton, K. J. Martell, S. P. Kwak, J. E. Dixon, and B. L. Largent A Novel Receptor-type Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Is Expressed dur- ing Neurogenesis in the Olfactory Neuroepithelium, 77, 387-400
K. A. Wood, B. Dipasquale, and R. J. Youle In Situ Labeling of Granule Cells for Apoptosis-Associated DNA Frag- mentation Reveals Different Mechanisms of Cell Loss in Developing Cerebellum, 17, 621-632
K. Broadie and M. Bate Activity-Dependent Development of the Neuromuscular Synapse dur- ing Drosophila Embryogenesis, 77, 607-619
R. J. Buckanovich, J. B. Posner, and R. B. Darnell Nova, the Paraneoplastic Ri Antigen, Is Homologous to an RNA-Binding Protein and Is Specifically Expressed in the Developing Motor System, 71, 657-672
J. S. Yang, P. B. Bennett, N. Makita, A. L. George, and R. L. Barchi Expression of the Sodium Channel B, Subunit in Rat Skeletal Muscle Is Selectively Associated with the Tetrodotoxin-Sensitive a Subunit Iso- form, 11, 915-922
G. Morales, M. Hubert, T. Brtimmendorf, U. Treubert, A. Tarnok, U. Schwarz, and F. C Rathjen Induction of Axonal Growth by Heterophilic Interactions between the Cell Surface Recognition Proteins Fll and Nr-CAM/Bravo, 11,1113-1122
K. B. Artinger and M. Bronner-Fraser Delayed Formation of the Floor Plate after Ablation of the Avian Noto- chord, 17, 1147-1161
Differentiation T. J. Kilpatrick and P. F. Bartlett Cloning and Growth of Multipotential Neural Precursors: Requirements for Proliferation and Differentiation, 70, 255-265
Differentiation factor P. H. Patterson and H. Nawa Review: Neuronal Differentiation Factors/Cytokines and Synaptic Plas- ticity, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (Suppl.), 123-137
M. S. Rao, Y. Sun, J. L. Escary, J. Perreau, S. Tresser, P. H. Patterson, R. E. Zigmond, P. Brulet, and S. C. Landis Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Mediates an Injury Response but Not a Tar- get-Directed Developmental Transmitter Switch in Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77,ii75-ii85
Dihydropyridine L. Forti and D. Pietrobon Functional Diversity of L-type Calcium Channels in Rat Cerebellar Neu- rons, 10, 437-450
S. Tang, A. Yatani, A. Bahinskr, Y. Mori, and A. Schwartz Molecular Localization of Regions in the L-type Calcium Channel Criti- cal for Dihydropyridine Action, 11, 1013-1021
DM20 Y. Yan, C. Lagenaur, and V. Narayanan Molecular Cloning of M6: identification of a PLP/DMZO Gene Family, 71. 423-431
DNA-binding protein j. Takeuchi, W. Shannon, N. Aronin, and W. J. Schwartz Compositional Changes of AP-1 DNA-Binding Proteins Are Regulated by Light in a Mammalian Circadian Clock, 71, 825-836
DNA polymerase K. A. Wood, B. Dipasquale, and R. J. Youle In Situ Labeling of Granule Cells for Apoptosis-Associated DNA Frag- mentation Reveals Different Mechanisms of Cell Loss in Developing Cerebellum, 71, 621-632
Dopamine receptor C. M. Cahill and J. C. Besharse Circadian Clock Functions Localized in Xenopus Retinal Photorecep- tors, 70, 573-577
Dopamine phydroxylase C. W. Hoyle, E. H. Mercer, R. D. Palmiter, and R. L. Brinster Expression of NCF in Sympathetic Neurons Leads to Excessive Axon Outgrowth from Ganglia but Decreased Terminal Innervation within Tissues, 70, 1019-1034
Dorsal root ganglion cell M. DiversCPierluissi and K. Dunlap Distinct, Convergent Second Messenger Pathways Modulate Neuronal Calcium Currents, 70, 753-760
Dorsal-ventral polarity K. 8. Artinger and M. Bronner-Fraser Delayed Formation of the Floor Plate after Ablation of the Avian Noto- chord, 77, 1147-1161
Drosophila melanogaster R. L. Davis Review: Mushroom Bodies and Drosophila Learning, 17, 1-14
L. E. Schneider, M. S. Roberts, and P. H. Taghert Cell Type-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of the Drosophila FMRF- amide Neuropeptide Gene, 70, 279-291
M. Hoshino, F. Matsuzaki, Y.-i. Nabeshima, and C. Hama hikaru genki, a CNS-Specific Gene Identified by Abnormal Locomotion in Drosophila, Encodes a Novel Type of Protein, 10, 395407
M. Seeger, G. Tear, D. Ferres-Marco, and C. S. Goodman Mutations Affecting Growth Cone Guidance in Drosophila: Genes Nec- essary for Guidance toward or away from the Midline, 70, 409-426
L. C. Griffith, L. M. Verselis, K. M. Aitken, C. P. Kyriacou, W. Danho, and R. J. Greenspan Inhibition of CalciumlCalmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase in Dro- sophila Disrupts Behavioral Plasticity, 70, 501-509
D. J. Merritt, A. Hawken, and P. M. Whitington The Role of the cut Gene in the Specification of Central Projections by Sensory Axons in Drosophila, 70, 741-752
R. L. Buchanan and S. Benzer Defective Clia in the Drosophila Brain Degeneration Mutant drop-dead, 70, 839-850
K. Ozaki, H. Nagatani, M. Ozaki, and F. Tokunaga Maturation of Major Drosophila Rhodopsin, ninaE, Requires Chromo- phore 3-Hydroxyretinal, 70,1113-1119
0. Pongs, J. Lindemeier, X. R. Zhu, T. Theil, D. Engelkamp, I. Krah- Jentgens, H.-G. Lambrecht, K. W. Koch, J. Schwemer, R. Rivosecchi, A. Mallart, J. Calceran, I. Canal, J. A. Barbas, and A. Ferrus Frequenin-A Novel Calcium-Binding Protein That Modulates Synaptic Efficacy in the Drosophila Nervous System, 11, 15-28
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
S. G. Britt, R. Feiler, K. Kirschfeld, and C. S. Zuker Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsin and Metarhodopsin In Vivo, 77, 29-39
E. M. C. Skoulakis, D. Kalderon, and R. L. Davis Preferential Expression in Mushroom Bodies of the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A and Its Role in Learning and Memory, 77,197-288
M. G. Muralidhar and J. B. Thomas The Drosophila bendless Gene Encodes a Neural Protein Related to Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, 77, 253-266
A. Kania, P.-L. Han, Y.-T. Kim, and H. Bellen neuromusculin, a Drosophila Gene Expressed in Peripheral Neuronal Precursors and Muscles, Encodes a Cell Adhesion Molecule, 77, 673- 687
K. Broadie and M. Bate Activity-Dependent Development of the Neuromuscular Synapse dur- ing Drosophila Embryogenesis, 77, 687-619
Dynein A. Mikami, B. M. Paschal, M. Mazumdar, and R. B. Vallee Molecular Cloning of the Retrograde Transport Motor Cytoplasmic Dyn- ein (MAP IQ, 70, 787-796
Dystrophin M. E. Adams, M. H. Butler, T. M. Dwyer, M. F. Peters, A. A. Murnane, and S. C. Froehner Two Forms of Mouse Syntrophin, a 58 kd Dystrophin-Associated Pro- tein, Differ in Primary Structure and Tissue Distribution, 77, 531-548
Embryogenesis P. Tsoulfas, D. Soppet, E. Escandon, L. Tessarollo, J.-L. Mendoza-Ramirez, A. Rosenthal, K. Nikolics, and L. F. Parada The Rat trkC Locus Encodes Multiple Neurogenic Receptors That Exhibit Differential Response to Neurotrophin-3 in PC12 Cells, 70, 975-990
Endocytosis E. Neher and R. S. Zucker Multiple Calcium-Dependent Processes Related to Secretion in Bovine Chromaffin Cells, 70, 21-30
T. A. Ryan, H. Reuter, B. Wendland, F. E. Schweizer, R. W. Tsien, and S. J. Smith The Kinetics of Synaptic Vesicle Recycling Measured at Single Presynap tic Boutons, 77, 713-724
I. Bezprozvanny and B. E. Ehrlich ATP Modulates the Function of lnositol 1,4,5TrisphosphateGated Chan- nels at Two Sites, 70, 1175-1184
Endosome R. Bauerfeind, A. Regnier-Vigouroux, T. Flatmark, and W. 8. Huttner Selective Storage of Acetylcholine, but Not Catecholamines, in Neuro- endocrine Synaptic-like Microvesicles of Early Endosomal Origin, 77, 105-121
Enhancer L. E. Schneider, M. S. Roberts, and P. H. Taghert Cell Type-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of the Drosophila FMRF- amide Neuropeptide Gene, 70, 279-291
Entorhinal cortex J. A. White, A. Alonso, and A. R. Kay A Heart-like Na+Current in the Medial Entorhinal Cortex, 77,1037-1847
Epidermal growth factor (ECF) N. K. Mahanthappa and C. A. Schwarting Peptide Growth Factor Control of Olfactory Neurogenesis and Neuron Survival In Vitro: Roles of ECF and TNF-J3s, 70, 293-305
A. L. Vescovi, B. A. Reynolds, D. D. Fraser, and S. Weiss bFGF ReRulates the Proliferative Fateof Unipotent (Neuronal) and Bipo- tent (Neuronal/Astroglial) EGF-Generated CNS Progenitor Cells, 77,951- 966
Excitatory amino acid L. S. Lerea and J. 0. McNamara lonotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes Activate c-fos Transcription by Distinct Calcium-Requiring Intracellular Signaling Pathways, 70, 31-41
A. Baude, Z. Nusser, J. D. B. Roberts, E. Mulvihill, R. A. J. Mcllhinney, and P. Somogyi The Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor (mGluRlaJ Is Concentrated at Perisynaptic Membrane of Neuronal Subpopulations as Detected by lmmunogold Reaction, 77, 771-787
Exocytosis Y. Hata, B. Davletov, A. C. Petrenko, R. Jahn, and T. C. Sudhof Interaction of Synaptotagmin with the Cytoplasmic Domains of Neurex- ins, 70, 307-315
P. Thomas, J. G. Wong, A. K. Lee, and W. Almers A Low Affinity Ca* Receptor Controls the Final Steps in Peptide Secre- tion from Pituitary Melanotrophs, 77, 93-184
K. Okano, J. R. Monck, and J. M. Fernandez GTPyS Stimulates Exocytosis in Patch-Clamped Melanotrophs, 77,165- 172
Fll T. Brummendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. Tarnok, and F. C. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe- cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
C. Morales, M. Hubert, T. Brummendorf, U. Treubert, A. Tlrnok, U. Schwarz, and F. G Rathjen Induction of Axonal Growth by Heterophilic Interactions between the Cell Surface Recognition Proteins Fll and Nr-CAM/Bravo, 77,1113-1122
P. Pesheva, C. Cennarini, C. Goridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-168/180, 70, 69-82
Facial nerve M. Kessel Reversal of Axonal Pathways from Rhombomere 3 Correlates with Extra Hox Expression Domains, 70, 379-393
Facilitation K. J. Swartz Modulation of CaZ+ Channels by Protein Kinase C in Rat Central and Peripheral Neurons: Distribution of G Protein-Mediated Inhibition, 77, 305-320
Fasciclin P. Diamond, A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, 1. Booth, L. Park, T. P. O’Con- nor, and D. C. Jay Fasciclin I and I I Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 77, 489-421
Fibroblast growth factor (FCF) T. J. Kilpatrick and P. F. Bartlett Cloning and Growthof Multipotential Neural Precursors: Requirements for Proliferation and Differentiation, 70, 255-265
R. A. Hughes, M. Sendtner, M. Goldfarb, D. Lindholm, and H. Thoenen Evidence That Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Is a Major Muscle-Derived Survival Factor for Cultured Spinal Motoneurons, 70, 369-377
C. M. Shackleford, K. Willert, J. Wang, and H. E. Varmus The Writ-7 Proto-Oncogene Induces Changes in Morphology, Gene Ex- pression, and Growth Factor Responsiveness in PC12 Cells, 77,865-875
A. L. Vescovi, B. A. Reynolds, D. D. Fraser, and S. Weiss bFGF Regulates the Proliferative Fate of Unipotent (Neuronal) and Bipo- tent (Neuronal/Astroglial) EGF-Generated CNS Progenitor Cells, 77,951- 966
Flash photolysis D. Bruns, F. Engert, and H.-D. Lux A Fast Activating Presynaptic Reuptake Current during Serotonergir Transmission in Identified Neurons of Hirudo, 70, 559-572
FMRFamide L. E. Schneider, M. S. Roberts, and P. H. Taghert Cell Type-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of the Drosophila FMRF- amide Neuropeptide Gene, 70, 279-291
S. Schacher, E. R. Kandel, and P.-G. Montarolo CAMP and Arachidonic Acid Simulate Long-Term Structural and Func- tional Changes Produced by Neurotransmitters in Aplysia Sensory Neu- rons, IO, 1079-1888
Fura- Y.-y. Peng and R. S. Zucker Release of LHRH Is Linearly Related to the Time integral of Presynaptic Ca* Elevation above aThreshold Level in Bullfrog Sympathetic Ganglia, IO, 465-473
P. Thomas, J. G. Wong, A. K. Lee, and W. Almers A Low Affinity Ca2+ Receptor Controls the Final Steps in Peptide Secre- tion from Pituitary Melanotrophs, 11, 93-184
R. Schneggenburger, Z. Zhou, A. Konnerth, and E. Neher Fractional Contribution of Calcium to the Cation Current through Glu- tamate Receptor Channels, 11, 133-143
D. J. Perkel, J. J. Petrozzino, R. A. Nicoll, and J. A. Connor The Role of Ca2+ Entry via Synaptically Activated NMDA Receptors in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation, 11, 817-823
Furaptra P. Thomas, J. G. Wong, A. K. Lee, and W. Almers A Low Affinity Ca*+ Receptor Controls the Final Steps in Peptide Secre- tion from Pituitary Melanotrophs, 11, 93-104
Furosemide R. A. Pearce Physiological EvidenceforTwo Distinct GABA, Responses in Rat Hippo- campus, 10,189-288
y-Aminobutyric acid (CABA) D. Attwell, B. Barbour, and M. Szatkowski Review: Nonvesicular Release of Neurotransmitter, 17, 481-487
J. S. Isaacson, J. M. Solis, and R. A. Nicoll Local and Diffuse Synaptic Actions of GABA in the Hippocampus, IO, 165-175
M. DiversbPierluissi and K. Dunlap Distinct, Convergent Second Messenger Pathways Modulate Neuronal Calcium Currents, 10, 753-768
N. A. Lambert and W. A. Wilson Heterogeneity in Presynaptic Regulation of CABA Release from Hippo- campal Inhibitory Neurons, 11, 1057-1067
y-Aminobutyric acid receptor R. Andrade Enhancement of B-Adrenergic Responses by C&Linked Receptors in Rat Hippocampus, 10, 83-88
R. A. Pearce Physiological Evidence for Two Distinct GABA,+ Responses in Rat Hippo- campus, 10,189-208
y-Aminobutyric acid transporter S. Mager, J. Naeve, M. Quick, C. Labarca, N. Davidson, and H. A. Lester Steady States, Charge Movements, and Rates for a Cloned GABA Trans- porter Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes, IO,%?188
Callus gallus domesticus Y. v. Boxberg, S. Deiss, and U. Schwarz Guidance and Topographic Stabilization of Nasal Chick Retinal Axons on Target-Derived Components In Vitro, 10, 345-357
Gap junction A. Peinado, R. Yuste, and L. C. Katz Extensive Dye Coupling between Rat Neocortical Neurons during the Period of Circuit Formation, 10, 103-114
Cating L. Forti and D. Pietrobon Functional Diversity of L-type Calcium Channels in Rat Cerebellar Neu- rons, 70, 437-450
P. A. Slesinger, Y. N. Jan, and L. Y. Jan The S4-S5 Loop Contributes to the Ion-Selective Pore of Potassium Chan- nels, 11, 739-749
D. E. Patton, J. W. West, W. A. Catterall, and A. L. Goldin A Peptide Segment Critical for Sodium Channel Inactivation Functions as an Inactivation Gate in a Potassium Channel, 11, 967-974
Cating current X. M. Shao and D. M. Papazian S4 Mutations Alter the Single-Channel Gating Kinetics of Shaker K+ Channels, 11, 343-352
E. Perozo, R. MacKinnon, F. Bezanilla, and E. Stefani Gating Currents from a Nonconducting Mutant Reveal Open-Closed Conformations in Shaker K+ Channels, 17, 353-358
Gene expression B. Mellstrom, J. R. Naranjo, N. S. Foulkes, M. Lafarga, and P. Sassone Corsi Transcriptional Response to CAMP in Brain: Specific Distribution and Induction of CREM Antagonists, 10, 655-665
J. Oberdick, K. Schilling, R. J. Smeyne, J. C. Corbin, C. Bocchiaro, and J. I. Morgan Control of Segment-like Patterns of Gene Expression in theMouse Cere bellum, 10, 1087-1018
K. Takimoto, A. F. Fomina, R. Cealy, J. S. Trimmer, and E. S. Levitan Dexamethasone Rapidly Induces Kvl.5 K+ Channel Gene Transcription and Expression in Clonal Pituitary Cells, 77, 359-369
R. Rupprecht, 1. M. H. M. Reul, T. Trapp, B. van Steensel, C. Wetzel, K. Damm, W. Zieglgfnsberger, and F. Holsboer Progesterone Receptor-Mediated Effects of Neuroactive Steroids, 11, 523-530
Gene family K. Kitagawa, M. P. Sinoway, C. Yang, R. M. Gould, and D. R. Colman A Proteolipid Protein Gene Family: Expression in Sharks and Rays and Possible Evolution from an Ancestral Gene Encoding a Pore-Forming Polypeptide, 11, 433-448
Gene regulation L. E. Schneider, M. S. Roberts, and P. H. Taghert Cell Type-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of the Drosophila FMRF- amide Neuropeptide Gene, 10, 279-291
Gene structure T. Timmusk, K. Palm, M. Metsis, T. Reintam, V. Paalme, M. Saarma, and H. Persson Multiple Promoters Direct Tissue-Specific Expression of the Rat BDNF Gene, 70, 475-489
Glia S. W. Levison and J. E. Goldman Both Oligodendrocytes and Astrocytes Develop from Progenitors in the Subventricular Zone of Postnatal Rat Forebrain, 10, 201-212
R. L. Buchanan and S. Benzer Defective Glia in the Drosophila Brain Degeneration Mutant drop-dead, 70, 839-850
E. A. Schwartz L-Glutamate Conditionally Modulates the K+ Current of Muller Glial Cells, 10, 1141-1149
Glucocorticoid K. Takimoto, A. F. Fomina, R. Gealy, J. S. Trimmer, and E. S. Levitan Dexamethasone Rapidly Induces Kv1.5 K’ Channel Gene Transcription and Expression in Clonal Pituitary Ceils, 11, 359-369
Glutamate D. Attwell, B. Barbour, and M. Szatkowski Review: Nonvesicular Release of Neurotransmitter, 11, 401-407
J. H. Weiss, D. M. Hartley, J.-y. Koh, and D. W. Choi AMPA Receptor Activation Potentiates Zinc Neurotoxicity, 10, 43-49
M. P. Mattson, B. Cheng, A. R. Culwell, F. S. Esch, I. Lieberburg, and R. E. Rydel Evidence for Excitoprotectiveand lntraneuronal Calcium-Regulating Roles for Secreted Forms of the J3-Amyloid Precursor Protein, 10, 243-254
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
E. A. Schwartz L-Glutamate Conditionally Modulates the K+ Current of Miiller Clial Cells, IO, 1141-1149
M. Tymianski, M. C. Wallace, I. Spigelman, M. Uno, P. L. Carlen, C. H. Tator, and M. P. Charlton Cell-Permeant Cap Chelators Reduce Early Excitotoxic and lschemic Neuronal Injury In Vitro and In Vivo, 11, 221-235
D. B. Dixon, K.-l. Takahashi, and D. R. Copenhagen L-Glutamate Suppresses HVA Calcium Current in Catfish Horizontal Cells by Raising Intracellular Proton Concentration, 11, 267-277
M. Sarantis, L. Ballerini, 8. Miller, R. A. Silver, M. Edwards, and D. Attwell Glutamate Uptake from the Synaptic Cleft Does Not Shape the Decay of the Non-NMDA Component of the Synaptic Current, 11, 541-549
J. B. Brocard, S. Rajdev, and I. J. Reynolds Glutamate-Induced Increases in Intracellular FreeMg*+ in Cultured Cor- tical Neurons, 11, 751-757
B. Barbour Synaptic Currents Evoked in Purkinje Cells by Stimulating individual Granule Cells, 11, 759-769
L.-H. Tang and E. Aizenman Allosteric Modulation of the NMDA Receptor by Dihydrolipoic and Li- poic Acid in Rat Cortical Neurons In Vitro, 11, 857-863
J. I. Luebke, K. Dunlap, and T. J. Turner Multiple Calcium Channel Types Control Clutamatergic Synaptic Trans- mission in the Hippocampus, 11, 895-982
Glutamate receptor L. S. Lerea and J. 0. McNamara lonotropic Glutamate Receptor Subtypes Activate c-fos Transcription by Distinct Calcium-Requiring Intracellular Signaling Pathways, 10, 31-41
C. F. Zorumski, K. A. Yamada, M. T. Price, and J. W. Olney A Benzodiazepine Recognition Site Associated with the Non-NMDA Glutamate Receptor, IO, 61-67
K. Williams, S. L. Russell, Y. M. Shen, and P. B. Molinoff Developmental Switch in the Expression of NMDA Receptors Occurs In Vivo and In Vitro, 70, 267-278
M. Kohler, N. Burnashev, B. Sakmann, and P. H. Seeburg Determinants of Ca2+ Permeability in Both TM1 and TM2of High Affinity Kainate Receptor Channels: Diversity by RNA Editing, 10, 491-500
R. Mooney, D. V. Madison, and C. J. Shatz Enhancement of Transmission at the Developing Retinogeniculate Syn- apse, 10, 815-825
A. M. Craig, C. D. Blackstone, R. L. Huganir, and C. Banker The Distribution of Glutamate Receptors in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons: PostsynapticClusteringof AMPA-Selective Subunits, 10,1055- 1068
S. Herlitze, M. Raditsch, J. P. Ruppersberg, W. Jahn, H. Monyer, R. Schoepfer, and V. Witzemann Argiotoxin Detects Molecular Differences in AMPA Receptor Channels, 10,1131-1140
L. 0. Trussell, S. Zhang, and I. M. Raman Desensitization of AMPA Receptors upon Multiquantal Neurotransmit- ter Release, 10, 1185-1196
P. J. O’Hara, P. 0. Sheppard, H. Th+gersen, D. Venezia, B.A. Haldeman, V. McGrane, K. M. Houamed, C. Thomsen, T. L. Gilbert, and E. R. Mul- vihill The Ligand-Binding Domain in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors Is Related to Bacterial Periplasmic Binding Proteins, 11, 41-52
Z. Z. Pan, C. Tong, and C. E. Jahr A False Transmitter at Excitatory Synapses, 11, 85-91
S. F. Traynelis, R. A. Silver, and S. C. Cull-Candy Estimated Conductanceof Glutamate Receptor Channels Activated dur- ing EPSCs at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Synapse, 11,279- 289
J. S. Diamond and D. R. Copenhagen The Contribution of NMDA and Non-NMDA Receptors to the Light- Evoked Input-Outpui Characteristics of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77,725- 738
A. Baude, Z. Nusser, J. D. B. Roberts, E. Mulvihill, R. A. J. Mcllhinney, and P. Somogyi The Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor (mGluRla) Is Concentrated at Perisynaptic Membrane of Neuronal Subpopulations as Detected by lmmunogold Reaction, 11, 771-787
K. M. Partin, D. K. Patneau, C. A. Winters, M. L. Mayer, and A. Buonanno Selective Modulation of Desensitization at AMPA versus Kainate Recep tors by Cyclothiazide and Concanavalin A, 11, 1869-1882
S. Hestrin Different Glutamate Receptor Channels Mediate Fast Excitatory Synap tic Currents in Inhibitory and Excitatory Cortical Neurons, 11, 1883- 1091
Clycine D. Attwell, B. Barbour, and M. Szatkowski Review: Nonvesicular Release of Neurotransmitter, 71, 481-407
Clycine receptor J. Kuhse, B. Laube, D. Magalei, and H. Betz Assembly of the Inhibitory Clycine Receptor: identification of Amino Acid Sequence Motifs Governing Subunit Stoichiometry, 11,1849-1056
Clycosylation K. Ozaki, H. Nagatani, M. Ozaki, and F. Tokunaga Maturation of Major Drosophila Rhodopsin, ninaE, Requires Chromo- phore ZHydroxyretinal, 70, 1113-1119
G protein H. R. Bourne and R. Nicoll Review: Molecular Machines Integrate Coincident Synaptic Signals, Cell 72/Neuron IO (SuppI.), 65-75
M. S. Shapiro and B. Hille Substance P and Somatostatin Inhibit Calcium Channels in Rat Sympa- thetic Neurons via Different G Protein Pathways, 10, II-20
1. Yang and R. W. Tsien Enhancement of N- and L-type Calcium Channel Currents by Protein Kinase C in Frog Sympathetic Neurons, 10, 127-136
K.-L. Laugwitz, S. Offermanns, K. Spicher, and G. Schultz u and 8 Opioid Receptors Differentially Couple to G Protein Subtypes in Membranes of Human Neuroblastoma SH-SYSY Cells, 70, 233-242
M. Divers&Pierluissi and K. Dunlap Distinct, Convergent Second Messenger Pathways Modulate Neuronal Calcium Currents, 10, 753-768
K. Okano, J. R. Monck, and J. M. Fernandez GTPvS Stimulates Exocytosis in Patch-Clamped Melanotrophs, II, 165- 172
K. J. Swartz Modulation of Ca2+ Channels by Protein Kinase C in Rat Central and Peripheral Neurons: Distribution of G Protein-Mediated Inhibition, 77, 305-320
J. K. Angleson and T. G. Wensel A GTPase-Accelerating Factor for Transducin, Distinct from Its Effector cGMP Phosphodiesterase, in Rod Outer Segment Membranes, 11,939- 949
Granule cell S. F. Traynelis, R. A. Silver, and S. G. Cull-Candy Estimated Conductance of Glutamate Receptor Channels Activated dur- ing EPSCs at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Synapse, 11,279- 289
8. Barbour Synaptic Currents Evoked in Purkinje Cells by Stimulating Individual Granule Cells, 11, 759-769
Growth cone M. Seeger, G. Tear, D. Ferres-Marco, and C. S. Goodman Mutations Affecting Growth Cone Guidance in Drosophila: Genes Nec- essary for Guidance toward or away from the Midline, 10, W-426
D. W. Sretavan and L. F. Reichardt Time-Lapse Video Analysis of Retinal Ganglion Cell Axon Pathfinding at the Mammalian Optic Chiasm: Growth Cone Guidance Using Intrinsic Chiasm Cues, 70, 761-777
Z. Dai and H. B. Peng Elevation in Presynaptic Ca 2+ Level Accompanying initial Nerve-Muscle Contact in Tissue Culture, 70, 827-837
G,-coupled receptor H. Hashimoto, T. Ishihara, R. Shigemoto, K. Mori, and S. Nagata Molecular Cloning and Tissue Distribution of a Receptor for Pituitary Adenylate Cyclasedctivating Polypeptide, 71, 333-342
CTPase-accelerating protein J. K. Angleson and T. C. Wensel A CTPase-Accelerating Factor for Transducin, Distinct from Its Effector cGMP Phosphodiesterase, in Rod Outer Segment Membranes, 77,939- 949
Cuanylyl cyclase M. P. Gray-Keller, A. S. Polans, K. Palczewski, and P. B. Detwiler The Effect of Recoverin-like Calcium-Binding Proteins on the Photore- sponse of Retinal Rods, IO, 523-531
0. Pongs, J. Lindemeier, X. R. Zhu, T. Theil, D. Engelkamp, I. Krah- Jentgens, H.-G. Lambrecht, K. W. Koch, J. Schwemer, R. Rivosecchi, A. Mallart, J. Galceran, I. Canal, J. A. Barbas, and A. Ferrtjs Frequenin-A Novel Calcium-Binding Protein That Modulates Synaptic Efficacy in the Drosophila Nervous System, 77, 15-28
Hair cell P. G. Gillespie, M. C. Wagner, and A. J. Hudspeth Identification of a 120 kd Hair-Bundle Myosin Located Near Stereociliary Tips, 11, 581-594
Helisoma trivolvis L. R. Funte and P. G. Haydon Synaptic Target Contact Enhances Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Activat- ing CAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase during Synaptogenesis, IO, 1069- 1078
Hindbrain H. Simon and A. Lumsden Rhombomere-Specific Origin of the Contralateral Vestibulodcoustic Efferent Neurons and Their Migration across the Embryonic Midline, 11, 209-220
Hippocampal formation C. W. Rebeck, J. S. Reiter, D. K. Strickland, and B. 7. Hyman Apolipoprotein E in Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease: Allelic Variation and Receptor Interactions, 17, 575-580
Hippocampal neuron K. Hoehn, T. W. J. Watson, and 8. A. MacVicar A Novel Tetrodotoxin-Insensitive, Slow Sodium Current in Striatal and Hippocampal Neurons, IO, 543-552
Hippocampus J. S. Isaacson, J. M. Solis, and R. A. Nicoll Local and Diffuse Synaptic Actions of CABA in the Hippocampus, 70, 165-175
R. A. Pearce Physiological Evidence for Two Distinct GABA, Responses in Rat Hipp+ campus, 70,189-200
J.-L. Tchelingerian, 1. Quinonero, J. Booss, and C. Jacque Localization of TNFa and IL-la lmmunoreactivities in Striatal Neurons after Surgical Injury to the Hippocampus, 70, 213-224
M. P. Mattson, B. Cheng, A. R. Culwell, F. S. Esch, I. Lieberburg, and R. E. Rydel Evidence for Excitoprotectiveand lntraneuronal Calcium-Regulating Roles for Secreted Forms of the P-Amyloid Precursor Protein, 10, 243-254
D. J. Mogul, M. E. Adams, and A. P. Fox Differential Activation of Adenosine Receptors Decreases N-type but Potentiates P-type Ca2+ Current in Hippocampal CA3 Neurons, 10,327- 334
C. Rosenmund and G. L. Westbrook Calcium-Induced Actin Depolymerization Reduces NMDA Channel Ac- tivity, 70, 805-814
R. J. Cormier, M. D. Mauk, and P. T. Kelly Glutamate lontophoresis Induces Long-Term Potentiation in the Ab- sence of Evoked Presynaptic Activity, 70, 907-919
N. Otmakhov, A. M. Shirke, and R. Malinow Measuring the Impact of Probabilistic Transmission on Neuronal Out- put, 70,1101-1111
K. J. Swartz Modulation of Ca*+ Channels by Protein Kinase C in Rat Central and Peripheral Neurons: Distribution of G Protein-Mediated Inhibition, 77, 305-320
M. Sarantis, L. Ballerini, B. Miller, R. A. Silver, M. Edwards, and D. Attwell Glutamate Uptake from the Synaptic Cleft Does Not Shape the Decay of the Non-NMDA Component of the Synaptic Current, 17, 541-549
T. A. Ryan, H. Reuter, B. Wendland, F. E. Schweizer, R. W. Tsien, and S. J. Smith The Kinetics of Synaptic Vesicle Recycling Measured at Single Presynap- tic Boutons, 77, 713-724
A. Baude, Z. Nusser, J. D. B. Roberts, E. Mulvihill, R. A. I. Mcllhinney, and P. Somogyi The Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor (mGluRla) Is Concentrated at Perisynaptic Membrane of Neuronal Subpopulations as Detected by lmmunogold Reaction, 77, 771-787
D. J. Perkel, J. J. Petrozzino, R. A. Nicoll, and J. A. Connor The Role of CaL+ Entry via Synaptically Activated NMDA Receptors in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation, 11, 817-823
V. S. Vorobjev, I. N. Sharonova, I. B. Walsh, and H. L. Haas Histamine Potentiates N-Methyl-o-Aspartate Responses in Acutely lso- lated Hippocampal Neurons, 11,837-844
P. Pedarzani and J. F. Storm PKA Mediates the Effects of Monoamine Transmitters of the K’ Current Underlying the Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Hippocampal Neu- rons, 77, 1023-1035
Histamine V. S. Vorobjev, I. N. Sharonova, I. 8. Walsh, and H. L. Haas Histamine Potentiates N-Methyl-o-Aspartate Responses in Acutely Iso- lated Hippocampal Neurons, 17, 837-844
Horizontal cell D. B. Dixon, K.-l. Takahashi, and D. R. Copenhagen L-Glutamate Suppresses HVA Calcium Current in Catfish Horizontal Cells by Raising Intracellular Proton Concentration, 11, 267-277
Hox M. Kessel Reversal of Axonal Pathways from Rhombomere 3 Correlates with Extra Hox Expression Domains, 70, 379-393
Huntington’s disease S.-H. Li, C. Schilling, W. S. Young Ill, X.-J. Li, R. L. Margolis, 0. C. Stine, M. V. Wagster, M. H. Abbott, M. L. Franz, N. C. Ranen, S. E. Folstein, J. C. Hedreen, and C. A. Ross Huntington’s Disease Gene (IT15) Is Widely Expressed in Human and Rat Tissues, 77, 985-993
HVA current D. B. Dixon, K.-l. Takahashi, and D. R. Copenhagen L-Glutamate Suppresses HVA Calcium Current in Catfish Horizontal Cells by Raising Intracellular Proton Concentration, 11, 267-277
Hybridization analysis Y. Fujita, M. Mynlieff, R. T. Dirksen, M.-S. Kim, T. Niidome, J. Nakai, T. Friedrich, N. Iwabe, T. Miyata, T. Furuichi, D. Furutama, K. Mikoshiba, Y. Mori, and K. G. Beam Primary Structure and Functional Expression of the o-Conotoxin-Sensi- tive N-type Calcium Channel from Rabbit Brain, 10, 585-598
Hypothalamus H. U. Zeilhofer, T. H. Mtiller, and D. Swandulla Inhibition of High Voltage-Activated Calcium Currents by L-Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Calcium Influx, 70, 879-887
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
T. W. lovenberg, 6. M. Baron, L. de Lecea, J. D. Miller, R. A. Prosser, M. A. Rea, P. E. Foye, M. Racke, A. L. Slone, B. W. Siegel, P. E. Danielson, j. G. Sutcliffe, and M. C. Erlander A Novel Adenylyl Cyclase-Activating Serotonin Receptor (5HT7) Impli- cated in the Regulation of Mammalian Circadian Rhythms, 77,449-458
Immediate early gene K. Yamagata, K. I. Andreasson, W. E. Kaufmann, C. A. Barnes, and P. F. Worley Expression of a Mitogen-Inducible Cyclooxygenase in Brain Neurons: Regulation by Synaptic Activity and Glucocorticoids, 77, 371-386
lmmunocytochemistry A. Baude, Z. Nusser, J. D. 8. Roberts, E. Mulvihill, R. A. J. Mcllhinney, and P. Somogyi The Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor (mGluRla) Is Concentrated at Perisynaptic Membrane of Neuronal Subpopulations as Detected by lmmunogold Reaction, 77, 771-787
lmmunoglobulin gene superfamily M. Hoshino, F. Matsuzaki, Y.-i. Nabeshima, and C. Hama hikaro genki, a CNS-Specific Gene Identified by Abnormal Locomotion in Drosophila, Encodes a Novel Type of Protein, 70, 395-407
T. Brtimmendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. Tdrnok, and F. G. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe- cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
A. Kania, P.-L. Han, Y.-T. Kim, and H. Bellen neuromusculin, a Drosophila Gene Expressed in Peripheral Neuronal Precursors and Muscles, Encodes a Cell Adhesion Molecule, 77, 673- 687
C. Morales, M. Hubert, T. Brtimmendorf, U. Treubert, A. Tirnok, U. Schwarz, and F. G Rathjen Induction of Axonal Growth by Heterophilic Interactions between the Cell Surface Recognition Proteins Fll and Nr-CAM/Bravo, 77,1113-1122
lmmunohistochemistry j. Takeuchi, W. Shannon, N. Aronin, and W. J. Schwartz Compositional Changes of AP-1 DNA-Binding Proteins Are Regulated by Light in a Mammalian Circadian Clock, 77, 825-836
lmmunoprecipitation R. A. Hughes, M. Sendtner, M. Coldfarb, D. Lindholm, and H. Thoenen Evidence That Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Is a Major Muscle-Derived Survival Factor for Cultured Spinal Motoneurons, 70, 369-377
Induction K. B. Artinger and M. Bronner-Fraser Delayed Formation of the Floor Plate after Ablation of the Avian Noto- chord, 77, 1147-1161
Injury J.-L. Tchelingerian, J. Quinonero, J. Booss, and C. Jacque Localization of TNFa and IL-la lmmunoreactivities in Striatal Neurons after Surgical Injury to the Hippocampus, 70, 213-224
lnositol trisphophate receptor I. Bezprozvanny and B. E. Ehrlich ATP Modulates the Function of lnositol 1,4,5TrisphosphateGated Chan- nels at Two Sites, 70, 1175-1184
In situ hybridization B. Borowsky, t. Mezey, and B. J. Hoffman Two Clycine Transporter Variants with Distinct Localization in the CNS and Peripheral Tissues Are Encoded by a Common Gene, 70,851-863
K. Yoshida, K. Kawamura, and J. lmaki Consistent Expression of c-fos mRNA in Rat Retinal Cells: Regulation by Light/Dark Cycle, 70, 1049-1054
P. A. Raymond, 1. K. Barthel, M. E. Rounsifer, S. A. Sullivan, and J. K. Knight Expression of Rod and ConeVisual Pigments in Goldfish and Zebrafish: A Rhodopsin-like Gene Is Expressed in Cones, 70, 1161-1174
R. C. Thompson, A. Mansour, H. Akil, and S. J. Watson Cloning and Pharmacological Characterization of a Rat p Opioid Recep- tor, 77,903-913
D. M. Valenzuela, P. C. Maisonpierre, D. J. Glass, E. Rojas, L. Nutiez, Y. Kong, D. R. Gies, T. N. Stitt, N. Y. Ip, and G. D. Yancopoulos Alternative Forms of Rat TrkC with Different Functional Capabilities, 70, 963-974
S.-H. Li, G. Schilling, W. S. Young Ill, X.-J. Li, R. L. Margolis, 0. C. Stine, M. V. Wagster, M. H. Abbott, M. L. Franz, N. C. Ranen, S. E. Folstein, J. C. Hedreen, and C. A. Ross Huntington’s Disease Gene (IT15) Is Widely Expressed in Human and Rat Tissues, 77, 985-993
Insulin E. DiCicco-Bloom, W. J. Friedman, and I. B. Black NT-3 Stimulates Sympathetic Neuroblast Proliferation by Promoting Pre- cursor Survival, 71,1101-1111
Insulin-like growth factor I M. 1. Carson, R. R. Behringer, R. L. Brinster, and F. A. McMorris Insulin-like Growth Factor I Increases Brain Growth and Central Ner- vous System Myelination in Transgenic Mice, 70, 729-740
lnterleukin 1 J.-L. Tchelingerian, J. Quinonero, J. Booss, and C. Jacque Localization of TNFa and IL-la lmmunoreactivities in Striatal Neurons after Surgical Injury to the Hippocampus, 70, 213-224
Interneuron N. A. Lambert and W. A. Wilson Heterogeneity in Presynaptic Regulation of CABA Release from Hippo- campal Inhibitory Neurons, 77, 1057-1067
Intracellular pH D. 8. Dixon, K.-l. Takahashi, and D. R. Copenhagen L-Glutamate Suppresses HVA Calcium Current in Catfish Horizontal Cells by Raising Intracellular Proton Concentration, 77, 267-277
Intracellular signaling C. M. Shackleford, K. Willert, J. Wang, and H. E. Varmus The Writ-7 Proto-Oncogene Induces Changes in Morphology, Gene Ex- pression, and Growth Factor Responsiveness in PC12 Cells, 77,865-875
Intracellular transport K. Simons and M. Zerial Review: Rab Proteins and the Road Maps for intracellular Transport, 77. 789-799
In vitro translation N. V. Shen, X. Chen, M. M. Boyer, and P. J. Pfaffinger Deletion Analysis of K+ Channel Assembly, 77, 67-76
Ion channel N. Unwin Review: Neurotransmitter Action: Opening of Ligand-Cated Ion Chan- nels, Cell R/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 31-41
K. Takimoto, A. F. Fomina, R. Cealy, J. S. Trimmer, and E. S. Levitan Dexamethasone Rapidly Induces Kv1.5 K’ Channel Gene Transcription and Expression in Clonal Pituitary Cells, 77, 359-369
Y. Yan, C. Lagenaur, and V. Narayanan Molecular Cloning of M6: Identification of a PLPIDM20 Gene Family, 17, 423-431
K. Kitagawa, M. P. Sinoway, C. Yang, R. M. Gould, and D. R. Colman A Proteolipid Protein Gene Family: Expression in Sharks and Rays and Possible Evolution from an Ancestral Gene Encoding a Pore-Forming Polypeptide, 77, 433-448
M. J. Root and R. MacKinnon Identification of an External Divalent Cation-Binding Site in the Pore of a cGMP-Activated Channel, 77, 459-466
C. E. Kirsch, C.-C. Shieh, J. A. Drewe, D. F. Vener, and A. M. Brown Segmental Exchanges Define CAminopyridine Binding and the Inner Mouth of K+ Pores, 77, 503-512
D. E. Patton, J. W. West, W. A. Catterall, and A. 1. Goldin A Peptide Segment Critical for Sodium Channel Inactivation Functions as an Inactivation Gate in a Potassium Channel, 77, 967-974
Ion channel gating T. R. Cummins, J. Zhou, F. J. Sigworth, C. Ukomadu, M. Stephan, L. J. Ptaeek, and W. S. Agnew Functional Consequences of a Na+ Channel Mutation Causing Hyperka- lemic Periodic Paralysis, 70, 667-678
Ion channel kinetics Z. Z. Pan, G. Tong, and C. E. Jahr A False Transmitter at Excitatory Synapses, 77, 85-91
Ion channel modulation C. Rosenmund and G. L. Westbrook Calcium-Induced Actin Depolymerization Reduces NMDA Channel Ac- tivity, 70, 805-814
lontophoresis R. J. Cormier, M. D. Mauk, and P. T. Kelly Glutamate lontophoresis Induces Long-Term Potentiation in the Ab- sence of Evoked Presynaptic Activity, 70, 987-919
Ion permeation M. J. Root and R. MacKinnon Identification of an External Divalent Cation-Binding Site in the Pore of a cGMP-Activated Channel, 77, 459-466
P. A. Slesinger, Y. N. Jan, and L. Y. Jan The S4-S5 Loop Contributes to the Ion-Selective Pore of Potassium Chan- nels, 77, 739-749
Ion selectivity P. A. Slesinger, Y. N. Jan, and L. Y. Jan The S4S5 Loop Contributes to the Ion-Selective Pore of Potassium Chan- nels, 77, 739-749
lschemia J.-P. Merlio, P. Ernfors, Z. Kokaia, D. S. Middlemas, J. Bengzon, M. Ko- kaia, M.-L. Smith, B. K. Siesjo, T. Hunter, 0. Lindvall, and H. Persson Increased Production of the TrkB Protein Tyrosine Kinase Receptor after Brain Insults, 70, 151-164
M. Tymianski, M. C. Wallace, I. Spigelman, M. Uno, P. L. Carlen, C. H. Tator, and M. P. Charlton Cell-Permeant Ca*+ Chelators Reduce Early Excitotoxic and lschemic Neuronal Injury In Vitro and In Vivo, 77, 221-235
lun J. Takeuchi, W. Shannon, N. Aronin, and W. J. Schwartz Compositional Changes of AP-1 DNA-Binding Proteins Are Regulated by Light in a Mammalian Circadian Clock, 77,825-836
Kainate receptor J. H. Weiss, D. M. Hartley, J.-y. Koh, and D. W. Choi AMPA Receptor Activation Potentiates Zinc Neurotoxicity, 70, 43-49
S. D. Donevan and M. A. Rogawski CYKI 52466, a2,5Benzodiazepine, IsaHighJy Selective, Noncompetitive Antagonist of AMPA/Kainate Receptor Responses, 70, 51-59
C. F. Zorumski, K. A. Yamada, M. T. Price, and J. W. Olney A Benzodiazepine Recognition Site Associated with the Non-NMDA Glutamate Receptor, 70, 61-67
M. Kohler, N. Burnashev, B. Sakmann, and P. H. Seeburg Determinants of CaZ+ Permeability in Both TM1 and TM2 of High Affinity Kainate Receptor Channels: Diversity by RNA Editing, 70,491-5&l
K. M. Partin, D. K. Patneau, C. A. Winters, M. L. Mayer, and A. Buonanno Selective Modulation of Desensitization at AMPA versus Kainate Recep tors by Cyclothiazide and Concanavalin A, 77, 1869-1882
Kindling J.-P. Merlio, P. Ernfors, Z. Kokaia, D. S. Middlemas, J. Bengzon, M. Ko- kaia, M.-L. Smith, B. K. Siesjo, T. Hunter, 0. Lindvall, and H. Persson Increased Production of theTrkB Protein Tyrosine Kinase Receptor after Brain Insults, 70, 151-164
Learning and memory G. M. Edelman Review: Neural Darwinism: Selection and Reentrant Signaling in Higher Brain Function, 70, 115-125
R. L. Davis Review: Mushroom Bodies and Drosophila Learning, 77, 1-14
L. C. Griffith, L. M. Verselis, K. M. Aitken, C. P. Kyriacou, W. Danho, and R. J. Greenspan Inhibition of Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase in Dro- sophila Disrupts Behavioral Plasticity, 70, 501-589
E. M. C. Skoulakis, D. Kalderon, and R. L. Davis Preferential Expression in Mushroom Bodies of the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A and Its Role in Learning and Memory, 77, 197-288
Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) N. Y. Ip, J. McClain, N. X. Barrezueta, T. H. Aldrich, L. Pan, Y. Li, S. J. Wiegand, B. Friedman, S. Davis, and G. D. Yancopoulos The a Component of the CNTF Receptor Is Required for Signaling and Defines Potential CNTF Targets in the Adult and during Development, 70,89-102
J. A. Kessler, W. H. Ludlam, M. M. Freidin, D. H. Hall, M. D. Michaelson, D. C. Spray, M. Dougherty, and D. K. Batter Cytokinelnduced Programmed Death of Cultured Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1123-1132
M. S. Rao, Y. Sun, J. L. Escary, J. Perreau, S. Tresser, P. H. Patterson, R. E. Zigmond, P. Brulet, and S. C. Landis Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Mediates an Injury Response but Not a Tar- get-Directed Developmental Transmitter Switch in Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1175-1185
Ligand-binding site P. J. Q’Hara, P. 0. Sheppard, H. Th$gersen, D. Venezia, B.A. Haldeman, V. McGrane, K. M. Houamed, C. Thomsen, T. L. Gilbert, and E. R. Mul- vihill The Ligand-Binding Domain in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors Is Related to Bacterial Periplasmic Binding Proteins, 77, 41-52
Ligand-gated channel N. Unwin Review: Neurotransmitter Action: Opening of Ligand-Cated Ion Chan- nels, Cell 727Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 31-41
Limulus polyphemus J. Shin, E. A. Richard, and J. E. Lisman CaZ+ Is an Obligatory Intermediate in the Excitation Cascade of Limulus Photoreceptors, 77, 845-855
Lithium P. Calabresi, A. Pisani, N. B. Mercuri, and C. Bernardi Lithium Treatment Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Stria- turn, 70, 955-962
Locus ceruleus E. J. Nestler, B. T. Hope, and K. L. Widnell Review: Drug Addiction: A Model for the Molecular Basis of Neural Plasticity, 77, 995-1086
Long-term depression P. Calabresi, A. Pisani, N. B. Mercuri, and G. Bernardi Lithium Treatment Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Stria- turn, 70, 955-962
D. J. Linden, M. Smeyne, and J. A. Connor Induction of Cerebellar Long-Term Depression in Culture Requires Post- synaptic Action of Sodium Ions, 77, 1893-1100
Long-term facilitation B.-K: Kaang, E. R. Kandel, and S. C. N. Grant Activation of CAMP-Responsive Genes by Stimuli That Produce Long- Term Facilitation in Aplysia Sensory Neurons, 70, 427-435
Long-term potentiation C. F. Stevens Review: Quanta1 Release of Neurotransmitter and Long-Term Potentia- tion, Cel 727Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 55-63
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
A. Wieraszko, G. Li, E. Kornecki, M. V. Hogan, and V. H. Ehrlich Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus Induced by Platelet-Acti- vating Factor, 70, 553-557
R. J. Cormier, M. D. Mauk, and P. T. Kelly Glutamate lontophoresis Induces Long-Term Potentiation in the Ab- sence of Evoked Presynaptic Activity, IO, 907-919
R. Mooney, D. V. Madison, and C. J. Shatz Enhancement of Transmission at the Developing Retinogeniculate Syn- apse, 10, 815-825
N. Otmakhov, A, M. Shirke, and R. Malinow Measuring the Impact of Probabilistic Transmission on Neuronal Out- put, IO, 1101-1111
K. Yamagata, K. I. Andreasson, W. E. Kaufmann, C. A. Barnes, and P. F. Worley Expression of a Mitogen-Inducible Cyclooxygenase in Brain Neurons: Regulation by Synaptic Activity and Glucocorticoids, 77, 371-386
D. J. Perkel, J. J. Petrozzino, R. A. Nicoll, and J. A. Connor The Role of Caz+ Entry via Synaptically Activated NMDA Receptors in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation, 71, 817-823
J. H. Williams, Y.-G. Li, A. Nayak, M. L. Errington, K. P. S. J. Murphy, and T. V. P. Bliss The Suppression of Long-Term Potentiation in Rat Hippocampus by Inhibitors of Nitric Oxide Synthase Is Temperature and Age Dependent, ll,Bn-884
low density lipoprotein C. W. Rebeck, J. S. Reiter, D. K. Strickland, and B. T. Hyman Apolipoprotein E in Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease: Allelic Variation and Receptor Interactions, 11, 575-580
Luteinking hormone-releasing hormone (LHRH) Y.-y. Peng and R. S. Zucker Release of LHRH Is Linearly Related to the Time Integral of Presynaptic Ca2* Elevation above a Threshold Level in Bullfrog Sympathetic Ganglia, 10, 465-473
M6 Y. Yan, C. Lagenaur, and V. Narayanan Molecular Cloning of M6: Identification of a PLPlDM20 Gene Family, 77, 423-431
Macrophage B. Borowsky, f. Mezey, and B. J. Hoffman Two Glycine Transporter Variants with Distinct Localization in the CNS and Peripheral Tissues Are Encoded by a Common Gene, 70, 851-863
Magfura-2 J. B. Brocard, S. Rajdev, and I. J. Reynolds Glutamate-Induced Increases in Intracellular FreeMg” in Cultured Cor- tical Neurons, 11, 751-757
Magnesium P. A. Slesinger, Y. N. Jan, and L. Y. Jan The Q-S5 Loop Contributes to the Ion-Selective Pore of Potassium Chan- nels, 11, 739-749
J. B. Brocard, S. Rajdev, and I. J. Reynolds Glutamate-Induced Increases in Intracellular FreeMgZ+in Cultured Cor- tical Neurons, 11, 751-757
M-channel C. E. Stansfeld, S. J. Marsh, A. J. Gibb, and D. A. Brown Identification of M-Channels in Outside-Out Patches Excised from Sym- pathetic Ganglion Cells, 10, 639-654
N. V. Marrion Selective Reduction of One Mode of M-Channel Gating by Muscarine in Sympathetic Neurons, 11, 77-84
Mqurrent T. Akasu, M. Ito, T. Nakano, C. R. Schneider, M. A. Simmons, T. Tanaka, T. Tokimasa, and M. Yoshida Myosin Light Chain Kinase Occurs in Bullfrog Sympathetic Neurons and May Modulate Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents, 71, 1133- 1145
Melanotroph K. Okano, J. R. Monck, and J. M. Fernandez GTbS Stimulates Exocytosis in Patch-Clamped Melanotrophs, 77,165- 172
Melatonin C. M. Cahill and J. C. Besharse Circadian Clock Functions Localized in Xenopus Retinal Photorecep tors, IO, 573-577
Membrane capacitance K. Okano, J. R. Monck, and J. M. Fernandez GTbS Stimulates Exocy-tosis in Patch-Clamped Melanotrophs, 11,165- 172
P. Thomas, J. G. Wong, A. K. Lee, and W. Almers A Low Affinity Caz+ Receptor Controls the Final Steps in Peptide Secre- tion from Pituitary Melanotrophs, 11, 93-104
Metabotropic receptor D. J. Linden, M. Smeyne, and J. A. Connor Induction of Cerebellar Long-Term Depression in Culture Requires Post- synaptic Action of Sodium Ions, 11, 1093-1100
MicroCALl P. Diamond, A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, J. Booth, L. Park, T. P. O’Con- nor, and D. C. Jay Fasciclin I and II Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 11, 409-421
Microtubuk-associated protein P. Litman, J. Barg, L. Rindzoonski, and I. Ginzburg Subcellular Localization of Tau mRNA in Differentiating Neuronal Cell Culture: Implications for Neuronal Polarity, IO, 627-638
A. Mikami, B. M. Paschal, M. Mazumdar, and R. B. Vallee Molecular Cloning of the Retrograde Transport Motor Cytoplasmic Dyn- ein (MAP lC), IO, 787-796
Migration M. B. Luskin Restricted Proliferation and Migration of Postnatally Generated Neu- rons Derived from the Forebrain Subventricular Zone, 11, 173-189
Mitosis A. Mikami, B. M. Paschal, M. Mazumdar, and R. B. Vallee Molecular Cloning of the Retrograde Transport Motor Cytoplasmic Dyn- ein (MAP IC), IO, 787-796
Modulation J. Yang and R. W. Tsien Enhancement of N- and L-type Calcium Channel Currents by Protein Kinase C in Frog Sympathetic Neurons, 70, 127-136
E. A. Schwartz t-Glutamate Conditionally Modulates the K+ Current of Mtiller Clial Cells, IO, 1141-1149
N. V. Marrion Selective Reduction of One Mode of M-Channel Gating by Muscarine in Sympathetic Neurons, 71, 77-84
Molecular modeling P. J. O’Hara, P. 0. Sheppard, H. Th+gersen, D. Venezia, 8. A. Haldeman, V. McCrane, K. M. Houamed, C.Thomsen,T. L. Gilbert, and E. R. Mulvih- ill The Ligand-Binding Domain in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors Is Related to Bacterial Periplasmic Binding Proteins, 11, 41-52
Monoclonal antibody A. B. Vernallis, W. C. Conroy, and D. K. Berg Neurons Assemble Acetylcholine Receptors with as Many as Three Kinds of Subunits While Maintaining Subunit Segregation among Receptor Subtypes, 70, 451-464
Mossy fiber S. F. Traynelis, R. A. Silver, and S. G. Cull-Candy Estimated Conductanceof Glutamate Receptor Channels Activated dur- ing EPSCs at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Synapse, 77,279- 289
Motor neuron N. Y. Ip, J. McClain, N. X. Barrezueta, T. H. Aldrich, L. Pan, Y. Li, S. J. Wiegand, B. Friedman, S. Davis, and C. D. Yancopoulos The a Component of the CNTF Receptor Is Required for Signaling and Defines Potential CNTF Targets in the Adult and during Development, 70,89-102
R. J. Balice-Gordon, C. K. Chua, C. C. Nelson, and j. W. Lichtman Gradual Loss of Synaptic Cartels Precedes Axon Withdrawal at Devel- oping Neuromuscular Junctions, 77, 801-815
K. B. Artinger and M. Bronner-Fraser Delayed Formation of the Floor Plate after Ablation of the Avian Noto- chord, 77, 1147-1161
Motor neuron disease V. E. Koliatsos, R. E. Clatterbuck, J. W. Winslow, M. H. Cayouette, and D. L. Price Evidence That Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is a Trophic Factor for Motor Neurons In Vivo, 70, 359-367
Motor protein A. Mikami, B. M. Paschal, M. Mazumdar, and R. B. Vallee Molecular Cloning of the Retrograde Transport Motor Cytoplasmic Dyn- ein (MAP lC), 70, 787-796
mRNA expression S.-H. Li, C. Schilling, W. S. Young III, X.-J. Li, R. L. Margolis, 0. C. Stine, M. V. Wagster, M. H. Abbott, M. L. Franz, N. G. Ranen, S. E. Folstein, J. C. Hedreen, and C. A. Ross Huntington’s Disease Gene (IT15) Is Widely Expressed in Human and Rat Tissues, 77, 985-993
mRNA localization B. J. Jasmin, R. K. Lee, and R. L. Rotundo Compartmentalization of Acetylcholinesterase mRNA and Enzyme at the Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction, 77, 467-477
mRNA regulation J. S. Yang, P. B. Bennett, N. Makita, A. L. George, and R. L. Barchi Expression of the Sodium Channel J.3, Subunit in Rat Skeletal Muscle Is Selectively Associated with the Tetrodotoxin-Sensitive a Subunit Iso- form, 77, 915-922
mRNA stabilization M. E. Fuentes and P. Taylor Control of Acetylcholinesterase Gene Expression during Myogenesis, 70, 679-687
Muscarine N. V. Marrion Selective Reduction of One Mode of M-Channel Gating by Muscarine in Sympathetic Neurons, 77, 77-84
Muscle C. Fahlke, E. Zachar, and R. Rude1 Chloride Channels with Reduced Single-Channel Conductance in Re- cessive Myotonia Congenita, 70, 225-232
S. C. Cannon and S. M. Strittmatter Functional Expression of Sodium Channel Mutations Identified in Fami- lies with Periodic Paralysis, 70, 317-326
R. A. Hughes, M. Sendtner, M. Coldfarb, D. Lindholm, and H. Thoenen Evidence That Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Is a Major Muscle-Derived Survival Factor for Cultured Spinal Motoneurons, 70, 369-377
T. R. Cummins, J. Zhou, F. J. Sigworth, C. Ukomadu, M. Stephan, L. J. Ptafek, and W. S. Agnew Functional Consequences of a Na+ Channel Mutation Causing Hyperka- lemic Periodic Paralysis, 70, 667-678
M. M. Maimone and J. P. Merlie Interaction of the 43 kd Postsynaptic Protein with All Subunits of the Muscle Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, 77, 53-66
M. J. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, W. Hoch, R. H. Scheller, and Z. Hall The Ability of Agrin to Cluster AChRs Depends on Alternative Splicing and on Cell Surface Proteoglycans, 77, 491-502
A. Kania, P.-L. Han, Y.-T. Kim, and H. Bellen neuromusculin, a Drosophila Gene Expressed in Peripheral Neuronal Precursors and Muscles, Encodes a Cell Adhesion Molecule, 77, 673- 687
J. S. Yang, P. B. Bennett, N. Makita, A. L. George, and R. L. Barchi Expression of the Sodium Channel B, Subunit in Rat Skeletal Muscle Is Selectively Associated with the Tetrodotoxin-Sensitive a Subunit lso- form, 77, 915-922
Mushroom bodies R. L. Davis Review: Mushroom Bodies and Drosophila Learning, 77, 1-14
E. M. C. Skoulakis, D. Kalderon, and R. L. Davis Preferential Expression in Mushroom Bodies of the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A and Its Role in Learning and Memory, 77,197-208
Mutagenesis P. J. O’Hara, P. 0. Sheppard, H. Th$gersen, D.Venezia, B. A. Haldeman, V. McCrane, K. M. Houamed, C. Thomsen, T. L. Gilbert, and E. R. Mul- vihill The Ligand-Binding Domain in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors Is Related to Bacterial Periplasmic Binding Proteins, 77, 41-52
M. J. Root and R. MacKinnon Identification of an External Divalent Cation-Binding Site in the Pore of a cGMP-Activated Channel, 77, 459-466
Mutation D. E. Patton, J. W. West, W. A. Catterall, and A. L. Coldin A Peptide Segment Critical for Sodium Channel Inactivation Functions as an Inactivation Gate in a Potassium Channel, 77, 967-974
Myelin M. J. Carson, R. R. Behringer, R. L. Brinster, and F. A. McMorris Insulin-like Growth Factor I Increases Brain Growth and Central Ner- vous System Myelination in Transgenic Mice, 70, 729-740
Myelin proteolipid protein K. Kitagawa, M. P. Sinoway, C. Yang, R. M. Gould, and D. R. Colman A Proteolipid Protein Gene Family: Expression in Sharks and Rays and Possible Evolution from an Ancestral Gene Encoding a Pore-Forming Polypeptide, 77, 433-448
Myoball C. Fahlke, E. Zachar, and R. Rude1 Chloride Channels with Reduced Single-Channel Conductance in Re- cessive Myotonia Congenita, 70, 225-232
Myogenesis M. E. Fuentes and P. Taylor Control of Acetylcholinesterase Gene Expression during Myogenesis, 70.679-687
Myosin light chain kinase T. Akasu, M. ho, T. Nakano, C. R. Schneider, M. A. Simmons, T. Tanaka, T. Tokimasa, and M. Yoshida Myosin Light Chain Kinase Occurs in Bullfrog Sympathetic Neurons and May Modulate Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents, 77, 1133- 1145
Myotonia C. Fahlke, E. Zachar, and R. Rude1 Chloride Channels with Reduced Single-Channel Conductance in Re- cessive Myotonia Congenita, 70, 225-232
T. R. Cummins, J. Zhou, F. J. Sigworth, C. Ukomadu, M. Stephan, L. J. PtaEek, and W. S. Agnew Functional Consequences of a Na+ Channel Mutation Causing Hyperka- lemic Periodic Paralysis, 70, 667-678
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Neocortex A. Peinado, R. Yuste, and L. C. Katz Extensive Dye Coupling between Rat Neocortical Neurons during the Period of Circuit Formation, 70, 103-114
Nerve growth factor (NCR N. Y. Ip, T. N. Stitt, P. Tapley, R. Klein, D. J. Glass, J. Fandl, L. A. Greene, M. Barbacid, and G. D. Yancopoulos Similarities and Differences in the Way Neurotrophins Interact with the Trk Receptors in Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells, 70, 137-149
G. W. Hoyle, E. H. Mercer, R. D. Palmiter, and R. L. Brinster Expression of NGF in Sympathetic Neurons Leads to Excessive Axon Outgrowth from Ganglia but Decreased Terminal Innervation within Tissues, 70, 1019-1034
A. M. Davies, K.-F. Lee, and R. Jaenisch p75Deficient Trigeminal Sensory Neurons Have an Altered Response to NGF but Not to Other Neurotrophins, 77, 565-574
G. M. Shackleford, K. Willert, J. Wang, and H. E. Varmus The Writ-7 Proto-Oncogene Induces Changes in Morphology, Gene Ex- pression, and Growth Factor Responsiveness in PC12 Cells, 77,865-875
E. DiCicco-Bloom, W. J. Friedman, and I. B. Black NT-3 Stimulates Sympathetic Neuroblast Proliferation by Promoting Pre cursor Survival, 77, 1101-1111
J. A. Kessler, W. H. Ludlam, M. M. Freidin, D. H. Hall, M. D. Michaelson, D. C. Spray, M. Dougherty, and D. K. Batter Cytokine-Induced Programmed Death of Cultured Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1123-1132
Nerve growth factor receptor N. Y. Ip, T. N. Stitt, P. Tapley, R. Klein, D. J. Glass, J. Fandl, L. A. Greene, M. Barbacid, and G. D. Yancopoulos Similarities and Differences in the Way Neurotrophins Interact with the Trk Receptors in Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells, 70, 137-149
Nerve terminal R. J. Balice-Cordon, C. K. Chua, C. C. Nelson, and J. W. Lichtman Gradual Loss of Synaptic Cartels Precedes Axon Withdrawal at Devel- oping Neuromuscular Junctions, 77, 801-815
Neural activity R. Mooney, D. V. Madison, and C. J. Shatz Enhancement of Transmission at the Developing Retinogeniculate Syn- apse, 70, 8X-825
Neural cell adhesion molecule A. Kania, P.-L. Han, Y.-T. Kim, and H. Bellen neuromusculin, a Drosophila Gene Expressed in Peripheral Neuronal Precursors and Muscles, Encodes a Cell Adhesion Molecule, 77, 673- 687
H. Tomasiewicz, K. Ono, D. Yee, C. Thompson, C. Coridis, U. Rutis- hauser, and T. Magnuson Genetic Deletion of a Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule Variant (N-CAM- 188) Produces Distinct Defects in the Central Nervous System, 77,1163- 1174
Neural crest M. S. Rao, Y. Sun, J. L. Escary, J. Perreau, S. Tresser, P. H. Patterson, R. E. Zigmond, P. Brulet, and S. C. Landis Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Mediates an Injury Response but Not aTar- get-Directed Developmental Transmitter Switch in Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1175-1185
Neural modeling G. M. Edelman Review: Neural Darwinism: Selection and Reentrant Signaling in Higher Brain Function, 70, 115-125
Neurexin Y. Hata, B. Davletov, A. G. Petrenko, R. Jahn, and T. C. Siidhof Interaction of Synaptotagmin with theCytoplasmicDomains of Neurex- ins, 70, 307-315
Neurite extension Y. Yan, C. Lagenaur, and V. Narayanan Molecular Cloning of M6: Identification of a PLPIDMZO Gene Family, 77, 423-431
Neuroblastoma K.-L. Laugwitz, S. Offermanns, K. Spicher, and G. Schultz )I and 8 Opioid Receptors Differentially Couple to C Protein Subtypes in Membranes of Human Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y Cells, 70, 233-242
D. R. Kaplan, K. Matsumoto, E. Lucarelli, and C. J. Thiele Induction of TrkB by Retinoic Acid Mediates Biologic Responsiveness to BDNF and Differentiation of Human Neuroblastoma Cells, 77, 321- 331
Neurodegeneration J. P. Hammang, R. R. Behringer, E. E. Baetge, R. D. Palmiter, R. L. Brinster, and A. Messing Oncogene Expression in Retinal Horizontal Cells of Transgenic Mice Results in a Cascade of Neurodegeneration, 70, 1197-1289
Neuroendocrine regulation H. U. Zeilhofer, T. H. Miiller, and D. Swandulla Inhibition of High Voltage-Activated Calcium Currents by t-Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Calcium Influx, 70, 879-887
Neuroepithelial cell T. J. Kilpatrick and P. F. Bartlett CloningandGrowthofMultipotential Neural Precursors: Requirements for Proliferation and Differentiation, 70, 255-265
Neurofibromatosis R. Weinberg Review: Tumor Suppressor Genes, 77, 191-196
D. H. Gutmann and F. S. Collins Review: The Neurofibromatosis Type 1 Gene and Its Protein Product, Neurofibromin, 70, 335-343
Neurofilament C. F. Hall and K. S. Kosik Axotomy-Induced Neurofilament Phosphorylation Is Inhibited In Situ by Microinjection of PKA and PKC Inhibitors into Identified Lamprey Neurons, 70, 613-625
Neurogenesis Y. Wakamatsu, Y. Watanabe, A. Shimono, and H. Kondoh Transition of Localization of the N-Myc Protein trom Nucleus to Cyto- plasm in Differentiating Neurons, 70, l-9
N. K. Mahanthappa and G. A. Schwarting Peptide Growth Factor Control of Olfactory Neurogenesis and Neuron Survival In Vitro: Roles of EGF and TNF-Bs, 70, 293-305
M. B. Luskin Restricted Proliferation and Migration of Postnatally Generated Neu- rons Derived from the Forebrain Subventricular Zone, 77, 173-189
K. M. Walton, K. J. Martell, S. P. Kwak, J. E. Dixon, and B. L. Largent A Novel Receptor-type Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Is Expressed dur- ing Neurogenesis in the Olfactory Neuroepithelium, 77, 387-400
H. Fujii and H. Hamada A CNS-Specific POU Transcription Factor, Brn-2, Is Required for Estab- lishing Mammalian Neural Cell Lineages, 77, 1197-1206
Neuromuscular junction Z. W. Hall and J. R. Sanes Review: Synaptic Structure and Development: The Neuromuscular Junc- tion, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (Suppl.), 99-121
Z. Dai and H. B. Peng Elevation in Presynaptic Ca *+ Level Accompanying Initial Nerve-Muscle Contact in Tissue Culture, 70, 827-837
M. M. Maimone and J. P. Merlie Interaction of the 43 kd Postsynaptic Protein with All Subunits of the Muscle Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, 77, 53-66
B. J. Jasmin, R. K. Lee, and R. L. Rotundo Compartmentalization of Acetylcholinesterase mRNA and Enzyme at the Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction, 77, 467-477
M. J. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, W. Hoch, R. H. Scheller, and Z. Hall The Ability of Agrin to Cluster AChRs Depends on Alternative Splicing and on Cell Surface Proteoglycans, 77, 491-502
K. Broadie and M. Bate Activity-Dependent Development of the Neuromuscular Synapse dur- ing Drosophila Embryogenesis, 77, 607-619
R. J. Balice-Cordon, C. K. Chua, C. C. Nelson, and J. W. Lichtman Gradual Loss of Synaptic Cartels Precedes Axon Withdrawal at Devel- oping Neuromuscular Junctions, 77, 801-815
Neuronal connectivity M. G. Muralidhar and J. B. Thomas The Drosophila bendless Gene Encodes a Neural Protein Related to Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, 77, 253-266
Neuronal excitability R. Rupprecht, J. M. H. M. Reul, T. Trapp, B. van Steensel, C. Wetzel, K. Damm, W. Zieglgansberger, and F. Holsboer Progesterone Receptor-Mediated Effects of Neuroactive Steroids, 77, 523-530
Neuronal plasticity P. Litman, J. Barg, L. Rindzoonski, and I. Ginzburg Subcellular Localization of Tau mRNA in Differentiating Neuronal Cell Culture: Implications for Neuronal Polarity, 70, 627-638
Neuronal polarity A. M. Craig, C. D. Blackstone, R. L. Huganir, and G. Banker The Distribution of Glutamate Receptors in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons: PostsynapticClusteringofAMPA-SelectiveSubunits, 70,1055- 1068
Neuropeptide L. E. Schneider, M. S. Roberts, and P. H. Taghert Cell Type-Specific Transcriptional Regulation of the Drosophila FMRF- amide Neuropeptide Gene, 70, 279-291
C.-P. Chang, R. V. Pearse II, S. O’Connell, and M. G. Rosenfeld Identification of a Seven Transmembrane Helix Receptor for Corticotro- pin-Releasing Factor and Sauvagine in Mammalian Brain, 77,1187-1195
Neurosteroid R. Rupprecht, J. M. H. M. Reul, T. Trapp, B. van Steensel, C. Wetzel, K. Damm, W. Zieglgansberger, and F. Holsboer Progesterone Receptor-Mediated Effects of Neuroactive Steroids, 77, 523-530
Neurotoxicity J. H. Weiss, D. M. Hartley, J.-y. Koh, and D. W. Choi AMPA Receptor Activation Potentiates Zinc Neurotoxicity, 70, 43-49
M. Tymianski, M. C. Wallace, I. Spigelman, M. Uno, P. L. Carlen, C. H. Tator, and M. P. Charlton Cell-Permeant Caz+ Chelators Reduce Early Excitotoxic and lschemic Neuronal Injury In Vitro and In Vivo, 77, 221-235
Neurotransmitter release R. B. Kelly Review: Storage and Release of Neurotransmitters, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 43-53
C. F. Stevens Review: Quanta1 Release of Neurotransmitter and Long-Term Potentia- tion, Cel 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 55-63
D. Attwell, B. Barbour, and M. Szatkowski Review: Nonvesicular Release of Neurotransmitter, 77, 401-407
N. Otmakhov, A. M. Shirke, and R. Malinow Measuring the Impact of Probabilistic Transmission on Neuronal Out- put, 70,1101-1111
L. 0. Trussell, S. Zhang, and I. M. Raman Desensitization of AMPA Receptors upon Multiquantal Neurotransmit- ter Release, 70,1185-11%
E. F. Stanley Single Calcium Channels and Acetylcholine Release at a Presynaptic Nerve Terminal, 77, 1007-1011
Neurotransmitter uptake N. Unwin Review: Neurotransmitter Action: Opening of Ligand-Gated Ion Chan- nels, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 31-41
S. Mager, J. Naeve, M. Quick, C. Labarca, N. Davidson, and H. A. Lester Steady States, Charge Movements, and Rates for a Cloned CABA Trans- porter Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes, 70, 177-188
D. Bruns, F. Engert, and H.-D. Lux A Fast Activating Presynaptic Reuptake Current during Serotonergic Transmission in Identified Neurons of Hirudo, 70, 559-572
B. Borowsky, E. Mezey, and B. J. Hoffman Two GlycineTransporter Variants with Distinct Localization in the CNS and Peripheral Tissues Are Encoded by a Common Gene, 70, 851-863
M. Sarantis, L. Ballerini, B. Miller, R. A. Silver, M. Edwards, and D. Attwell Glutamate Uptake from the Synaptic Cleft Does Not Shape the Decay of the Non-NMDA Component of the Synaptic Current, 77, 541-549
Neurotrophin N. Y. Ip, T. N. Stitt, P. Tapley, R. Klein, D. J. Glass, J. Fandl, L. A. Greene, M. Barbacid, and G. D. Yancopoulos Similarities and Differences in the Way Neurotrophins Interact with the Trk Receptors in Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells, 70, 137-149
J.-P. Merlio, P. Ernfors, Z. Kokaia, D. S. Middlemas, J. Bengzon, M. Ko- kaia, M.-L. Smith, B. K. Siesjo, T. Hunter, 0. Lindvall, and H. Persson Increased Production of theTrkB ProteinTyrosine KinaseReceptor after Brain Insults, 70, 151-164
V. E. Koliatsos, R. E. Clatterbuck, J. W. Winslow, M. H. Cayouette, and D. L. Price Evidence That Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is a Trophic Factor for Motor Neurons In Vivo, 70, 359-367
T. Timmusk, K. Palm, M. Metsis, T. Reintam, V. Paalme, M. Saarma, and H. Persson Multiple Promoters Direct Tissue-Specific Expression of the Rat BDNF Gene, 70, 475-489
A. M. Davies, K.-F. Lee, and R. Jaenisch p75-Deficient Trigeminal Sensory Neurons Have an Altered Response to NGF but Not to Other Neurotrophins, 77, 565-574
E. DiCicco-Bloom, W. J. Friedman, and I. B. Black NT-3 Stimulates Sympathetic Neuroblast Proliferation by Promoting Pm- cursor Survival, 77,1101-1111
Neurotrophin3 (NT-3) P. Tsoulfas, D. Soppet, E. Escandon, L. Tessarollo, J.-L. Mendoza-Ramirez, A. Rosenthal, K. Nikolics, and L. F. Parada The Rat t&C Locus Encodes Multiple Neurogenic Receptors That Exhibit Differential Response to Neurotrophin-3 in PC12 Cells, 70, 975-990
E. DiCicco-Bloom, W. J. Friedman, and I. B. Black NT-3 Stimulates Sympathetic Neuroblast Proliferation by Promoting Pre cursor Survival, 77,1101-1111
Neurotrophin receptor D. M. Valenzuela, P. C. Maisonpierre, D. J. Glass, E. Rojas, L. Nuhez, Y. Kong, D. R. Gies, T. N. Stitt, N. Y. Ip, and G. D. Yancopoulos Alternative Forms of Rat TrkC with Different Functional Capabilities, 70, 963-974
P. Tsoulfas, D. Soppet, E. Escandon, L. Tessarollo, J.-L. Mendoza-Ramirez, A. Rosenthal, K. Nikolics, and L. F. Parada The Rat t&C Locus Encodes Multiple Neurogenic Receptors That Exhibit Differential Response to Neurotrophin-3 in PC12 Cells, 70, 975-990
A. M. Davies, K.-F. Lee, and R. Jaenisch p75-Deficient Trigeminal Sensory Neurons Have an Altered Response to NGF but Not to Other Neurotrophins, 77, 565-574
Nitric oxide J. H. Williams, Y.-G. Li, A. Nayak, M. L. Errington, K. P. S. 1. Murphy, and T. V. P. Bliss The Suppression of Long-Term Potentiation in Rat Hippocampus by Inhibitors of Nitric Oxide Synthase Is Temperatureand Age Dependent, 7 1, 877~884
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
N-methyl-o-aspartate (NMDA) C. Rosenmund and G. L. Westbrook Calcium-Induced Actin Depolymerization Reduces NMDA Channel Ac- tivity, 10, 805-814
R. Mooney, D. V. Madison, and C. j. Shatz Enhancement of Transmission at the Developing Retinogeniculate Syn- apse, 10, 815-825
L.-H. Tang and E. Aizenman Allosteric Modulation of the NMDA Receptor by Dihydrolipoic and Li- poic Acid in Rat Cortical Neurons In Vitro, 11, 857863
N-methyl-u-aspartate receptor H. R. Bourne and R. Nicoll Review: Molecular Machines Integrate Coincident Synaptic Signals, Cell 72/Neuron 10 (Suppl.), 65-75
J. H. Weiss, D. M. Hartley, J-y. Koh, and D. W. Choi AMPA Receptor Activation Potentiates Zinc Neurotoxicity, 10, 43-49
K. Williams, S. L. Russell, Y. M. Shen, and P. B. Molinoff Developmental Switch in the Expression of NMDA Receptors Occurs In Vivo and In Vitro, 70, 267-278
A. Wieraszko, G. Li, E. Kornecki, M. V. Hogan, and Y. H. Ehrlich Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus Induced by Platelet-Acti- vating Factor, 10, 553-557
R. J. Cormier, M. D. Mauk, and P. T. Kelly Glutamate lontophoresis Induces Long-Term Potentiation in the Ab- sence of Evoked Presynaptic Activity, 70, 987-919
M. Hollmann, J. Boulter, C. Maron, L. Beasley, J. Sullivan, G. Pecht, and S. Heinemann Zinc Potentiates Agonist-Induced Currents at Certain Splice Variants of the NMDA Receptor, 10, 943-954
R. Schneggenburger, Z. Zhou, A. Konnerth, and E. Neher Fractional Contribution of Calcium to the Cation Current through Clu- tamate Receptor Channels, 11, 133-143
Z. Z. Pan, G. Tong, and C. E. Jahr A False Transmitter at Excitatory Synapses, 71, 85-91
J. B. Brocard, S. Rajdev, and I. J. Reynolds Glutamate-Induced Increases in Intracellular FreeMg” in Cultured Cor- tical Neurons, 11, 751-757
V. S. Vorobjev, I. N. Sharonova, I. B. Walsh, and H. L. Haas Histamine Potentiates N-Methyl-o-Aspartate Responses in Acutely Iso- lated Hippocampal Neurons, 11, 837-844
N-Myc Y. Wakamatsu, Y. Watanabe, A. Shimono, and H. Kondoh Transition of Localization of the N-Myc Protein from Nucleus to Cyto- plasm in Differentiating Neurons, 10, l-9
Nociception J. J. Lucas, B. Mellstrom, M. I. Colado, and J. R. Naranjo Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: Serotonin,, Receptor Agonists Trigger Transactivation by c-fos of the Prodynorphin Gene in Spinal Cord Neu- rons, 70, 599-611
Non-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor S. D. Donevan and M. A. Rogawski GYKI 52466,a2,3-Benzodiazepine, IsaHighly Selective, Noncompetitive Antagonist of AMPA/Kainate Receptor Responses, 10, 51-59
H. U. Zeilhofer, T. H. Miiller, and D. Swandulla Inhibition of High Voltage-Activated Calcium Currents by L-Glutamate Receptor-Mediated Calcium Influx, 70,879-887
M. Sarantis, L. Ballerini, 8. Miller, R.A. Silver, M. Edwards, and D. Attwell Glutamate Uptake from the Synaptic Cleft Does Not Shape the Decay of the Non-NMDA Component of the Synaptic Current, 11, 541-549
S. Hestrin Different Glutamate Receptor Channels Mediate Fast Excitatory Synap tic Currents in Inhibitory and Excitatory Cortical Neurons, 11, 1083- 1091
Norepinephrine M. DiversbPierluissi and K. Dunlap Distinct, Convergent Second Messenger Pathways Modulate Neuronal Calcium Currents, 10, 753-768
P. Pedarzani and J. F. Storm PKA Mediates the Effects of Monoamine Transmitters of the K+ Current Underlying the Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Hippocampal Neu- rons, 11, 1023-1035
Olfaction N. K. Mahanthappa and G. A. Schwarting Peptide Growth Factor Control of Olfactory Neurogenesis and Neuron Survival In Vitro: Roles of ECF and TNF-Bs, 10, 293-305
K. M. Walton, K. J. Martell, S. P. Kwak, J. E. Dixon, and B. L. Largent A Novel Receptor-type Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Is Expressed dur- ing Neurogenesis in the Olfactory Neuroepithelium, 71, 387-400
Olfactory bulb S. H. DeVries and D. A. Baylor Review: Synaptic Circuitry of the Retina and Olfactory Bulb, Cell 72/ Neuron 10 (SuppI.), 139-149
A.-S. LaMantia, M. C. Colbert, and E. Linney Retinoic Acid Induction and Regional Differentiation Prefigure Olfac- tory Pathway Formation in the Mammalian Forebrain, 70,1035-1048
M. B. Luskin Restricted Proliferation and Migration of Postnatally Generated Neu- rons Derived from the Forebrain Subventricular Zone, 71, 173-189
H. Tomasiewicz, K. Ono, D. Yee, C. Thompson, C. Goridis, U. Rutis- hauser, and T. Magnuson Genetic Deletion of a Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule Variant (N-CAM- 188) Produces Distinct Defects in the Central Nervous System, 11,1163- 1174
Olfactory receptor neuron S. J. Kleene Origin of the Chloride Current in Olfactory Transduction, 11, 123-132
Oligodendrocyte S. W. Levison and 1. E. Goldman Both Oligodendrocytes and Astrocytes Develop from Progenitors in the Subventricular Zone of Postnatal Rat Forebrain, 10, 201-212
M. J. Carson, R. R. Behringer, R. L. Brinster, and F. A. McMorris Insulin-like Growth Factor I Increases Brain Growth and Central Ner- vous System Myelination in Transgenic Mice, 10, 729-748
w-Agatoxin I. M. Mintz and B. P. Bean CABAe Receptor Inhibition of P-type Ca* Channels in Central Neurons, 10,889-898
W. A. Sather, T. Tanabe, J.-F. Zhang, Y. Mori, M. E. Adams, and R. W. Tsien Distinctive Biophysical and Pharmacological Properties of Class A (BI) Calcium Channel ct, Subunits, 11, 291-303
1. I. Luebke, K. Dunlap, and T. J. Turner Multiple Calcium Channel Types Control Glutamatergic SynapticTrans- mission in the Hippocampus, 17, 895-902
oConotoxin Y. Fujita, M. Mynlieff, R. T. Dirksen, M.-S. Kim, T. Niidome, J. Nakai, T. Friedrich, N. Iwabe, T. Miyata, T. Furuichi, D. Furutama, K. Mikoshiba, Y. Mori, and K. G. Beam Primary Structure and Functional Expression of the w-Conotoxin-Sensi- tive N-type Calcium Channel from Rabbit Brain, 10, 585-598
I. M. Mintz and B. P. Bean CAB& Receptor Inhibition of P-type Ca*+ Channels in Central Neurons, 10, 889-898
W. A. Sather, T. Tanabe, J.-F. Zhang, Y. Mori, M. E. Adams, and R. W. Tsien Distinctive Biophysical and Pharmacological Properties of Class A (BI) Calcium Channel a, Subunits, 11, 291-303
J. I. Luebke, K. Dunlap, and T. J. Turner Multiple Calcium Channel Types Control Glutamatergic SynapticTrans- mission in the Hippocampus, 77,895-902
Open channel blocker K. L. Choi, C. Mossman, J. Aube, and G. Yellen The Internal Quaternary Ammonium Receptor Site of ShakerPotassium Channels, 10, 533-541
Opioid E. J. Nestler, B. T. Hope, and K. L. Widnell Review: Drug Addiction: A Model for the Molecular Basis of Neural Plasticity, 77, 995-1006
W. A. Twitchell and S. C. Rane Opioid Peptide Modulation of Ca 2+-Dependent K’ and Voltage-Activated Ca2+ Currents in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells, 70, 701-789
N. A. Lambert and W. A. Wilson Heterogeneity in Presynaptic Regulation of CABA Release from Hippo- campal Inhibitory Neurons, 77, 1057-1067
Opioid receptor K.-L. Laugwitz, S. Offermanns, K. Spicher, and C. Schultz u and 8 Opioid Receptors Differentially Couple to G Protein Subtypes in Membranes of Human Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y Cells, 70,233-242
R. C. Thompson, A. Mansour, H. Akil, and S. J. Watson Cloning and Pharmacological Characterization of a Rat u Opioid Recep tor, 77, 903-913
Opsin M. E. Pierce, H. Sheshberadaran, Z. Zhang, L. E. Fox, M. L. Applebury, and J. S. Takahashi Circadian Regulation of lodopsin Gene Expression in Embryonic Photo- receptors in Retinal Cell Culture, 70, 579-584
P. A. Raymond, L. K. Barthel, M. E. Rounsifer, S. A. Sullivan, and J. K. Knight Expression of Rod and Cone Visual Pigments in Goldfish and Zebrafish: A Rhodopsin-like Gene Is Expressed in Cones, 70, 1161-1174
Optic chiasm D. W. Sretavan and L. F. Reichardt Time-Lapse Video Analysis of Retinal Ganglion Cell Axon Pathfinding at the Mammalian Optic Chiasm: Growth Cone Guidance Using Intrinsic Chiasm Cues, 70, 761-777
Paired helical filament G. T. Bramble& M. Goedert, R. lakes, S. E. Merrick, J. Q. Trojanowski, and V. M.-Y. Lee Abnormal Tau Phosphorylation at Ser 396 in Alzheimer’s Disease Recapit- ulates Development and Contributes to Reduced Microtubule Binding, 70, 1089-1899
M. Morishima-Kawashima, M. Hasegawa, K. Takio, M. Suzuki, K. Titani, and Y. lhara Ubiquitin Is Conjugated with Amino-Terminally Processed Tau in Paired Helical Filaments, 70, 1151-1168
j. Biernat, N. Custke, G. Drewes, E.-M. Mandelkow, and E. Mandelkow Phosphorylation of Ser20 Strongly Reduces Binding of Tau to Microtu- bules: Distribution between PHF-like lmmunoreactivity and Microtu- bule Binding, 77, 153-163
Paralysis, periodic S. C. Cannon and S. M. Strittmatter Functional Expression of Sodium Channel Mutations Identified in Fami- lies with Periodic Paralysis, 70, 317-326
T. R. Cummins, J. Zhou, F. J. Sigworth, C. Ukomadu, M. Stephan, L. J. Ptafek, and W. S. Agnew Functional Consequences of a Na+ Channel Mutation Causing Hyperka- lemic Periodic Paralysis, 70, 667-678
Paraneoplastic syndrome R. J. Buckanovich, J. B. Posner, and R. B. Darnell Nova, the Paraneoplastic Ri Antigen, Is Homologous to an RNA-Binding Protein and Is Specifically Expressed in the Developing Motor System, 71, 657-672
Patch-clamp analysis C. Fahlke, E. Zachar, and R. Rude1 Chloride Channels with Reduced Single-Channel Conductance in Re cessive Myotonia Congenita, 70, 225-232
L. Forti and D. Pietrobon Functional Diversity of L-type Calcium Channels in Rat Cerebellar Neu- rons, 70, 437-450
M. Kohler, N. Burnashev, B. Sakmann, and P. H. Seeburg Determinants of Ca*+ Permeability in Both TM1 and TM2 of High Affinity Kainate Receptor Channels: Diversity by RNA Editing, 70,497-500
T. R. Cummins, J. Zhou, F. J. Sigworth, C. Ukomadu, M. Stephan, L. J. Ptacek, and W. S. Agnew Functional Consequences of a Na+ Channel Mutation Causing Hyperka- lemic Periodic Paralysis, 70, 667-678
M. Cola and M. Crest Colocalization of Active KCa Channels and Ca’+ Channels within Ca2+ Domains in Helix Neurons, 70, 689-699
R. Schneggenburger, Z. Zhou, A. Konnerth, and E. Neher Fractional Contribution of Calcium to the Cation Current through Glu- tamate Receptor Channels, 77, 133-143
Z. Z. Pan, G. Tong, and C. E. Jahr A False Transmitter at Excitatory Synapses, 77, 85-91
W. Regehr, J. Kehoe, P. Ascher, and C. Armstrong Synaptically Triggered Action Potentials in Dendrites, 77, 145-151
D. J. Perkel, J. J. Petrozzino, R. A. Nicoll, and J. A. Connor The Role of Ca*+ Entry via Synaptically Activated NMDA Receptors in the Induction of Long-Term Potentiation, 77, 817-823
V. S. Vorobjev, I. N. Sharonova, I. 8. Walsh, and H. L. Haas Histamine Potentiates N-Methyl-oAspartate Responses in Acutely Iso- lated Hippocampal Neurons, 77, 837-844
L.-H. Tang and E. Aizenman Allosteric Modulation of the NMDA Receptor by Dihydrolipoic and Li- poic Acid in Rat Cortical Neurons In Vitro, 77, 857-863
Pathfinding M. Seeger, C. Tear, D. Ferres-Marco, and C. S. Goodman Mutations Affecting Growth Cone Guidance in Drosophila: Genes Nec- essary for Guidance toward or away from the Midline, 70, 489-426
PC12 cell C. M. Shackleford, K. Willert, J. Wang, and H. E. Varmus The Wrtt-7 Proto-Oncogene Induces Changes in Morphology, Gene Ex- pression, and Growth Factor Responsiveness in PC12 Cells, 77,865-875
Peripheral nervous system A. Kania, P.-L. Han, Y.-T. Kim, and H. Bellen neuromuscolin, a Drosophila Gene Expressed in Peripheral Neuronal Precursors and Muscles, Encodes a Cell Adhesion Molecule, 77, 673- 687
Periplasmic binding site P. J. Q’Hara, P. 0. Sheppard, H. Th+gersen, D. Venezia, B.A. Haldeman, V. McGrane, K. M. Houamed, C. Thomsen, T. L. Gilbert, and E. R. Mul- vihill The Ligand-Binding Domain in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors Is Related to Bacterial Periplasmic Binding Proteins, 77, 41-52
Phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase J. P. Hammang, R.R. Behringer, E. E. Baetge, R. D. Palmiter, R. L. Brinster, and A. Messing Oncogene Expression in Retinal Horizontal Cells of Transgenic Mice Results in a Cascade of Neurodegeneration, 70,1197-1209
Phosphorylation G. F. Hall and K. S. Kosik Axotomy-Induced Neurofilament Phosphorylation Is Inhibited In Situ by Microinjection of PKA and PKC Inhibitors into Identified Lamprey Neurons, 70, 613-625
K. J. Swartz Modulation of Cap Channels by Protein Kinase C in Rat Central and Peripheral Neurons: Distribution of G Protein-Mediated Inhibition, 77, 305-320
K. M. Walton, K. J. Martell, S. P. Kwak, J. E. Dixon, and B. L. Largent A Novel Receptor-type Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Is Expressed dur- ing Neurogenesis in the Olfactory Neuroepithelium, 77, 387-488
J. Jin, R. K. Crouch, D. W. Corson, B. M. Katz, E. F. MacNichol, and M. C. Cornwall Noncovalent Occupancy of the Retinal-Binding Pocket of Opsin Dimin- ishes Bleaching Adaptation of Retinal Cones, 77, 513-522
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Phosphotyrosine K. R. Wagner, J. B. Cohen, and R. L. Huganir The 87K Postsynaptic Membrane Protein from Torpedo Is a Protein- Tyrosine Kinase Substrate Homologous to Dystrophin, 70, 511-522
Photoaffinity labeling K.-L. Laugwitz, S. Offermanns, K. Spicher, and G. Schultz b and 6 Opioid Receptors Differentially Couple to C Protein Subtypes in Membranes of Human Neuroblastoma SH-SYSY Cells, 70, 233-242
P. C. Gillespie, M. C. Wagner, and A. J. Hudspeth Identification of a 120 kd Hair-Bundle Myosin Located Near Stereociliary Tips, 77, 581-594
Photoreceptor G. M. Cahill and 1. C. Besharse Circadian Clock Functions Localized in Xenopus Retinal Photorecep tars, 10, 573-577
M. E. Pierce, H. Sheshberadaran, 2. Zhang, L. E. Fox, M. L. Applebury, and J. S. Takahashi Circadian Regulation of lodopsin Gene Expression in Embryonic Photo- receptors in Retinal Cell Culture, 70, 579-584
W. BGnigk, W. Altenhofen, F. Miiller, A. Dose, M. Illing, R. S. Molday, and U. B. Kaupp Rod and Cone Photoreceptor Cells Express Distinct Genes for cCMP- Gated Channels, 10, 865-877
K. Yoshida, K. Kawamura, and J, Imaki Consistent Expression of c-fos mRNA in Rat Retinal Cells: Regulation by Light/Dark Cycle, 70, 1049-1054
K. Ozaki, H. Nagatani, M. Ozaki, and F. Tokunaga Maturation of Major Drosophila Rhodopsin, ninaE, Requires Chromo- phore SHydroxyretinal, 70,1113-1119
P. A. Raymond, L. K. Rarthel, M. E. Rounsifer, S. A. Sullivan, and J. K. Knight Expression of Rod and Cone Visual Pigments in Goldfish and Zebrafish: A Rhodopsin-like Gene Is Expressed in Cones, 70, 1161-1174
S. C. Britt, R. Feiler, K. Kirschfeld, and C. S. Zuker Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsin and Metarhodopsin In Vivo, 77, 29-39
G.-Q. Chang, Y. Hao, and F. Wong Apoptosis: Final Common Pathway of Photoreceptor Death in rd, rds, and Rhodopsin Mutant Mice, 77, 595-605
J. Shin, E. A. Richard, and J. E. Lisman Caz+ Is an Obligatory Intermediate in the Excitation Cascade of Limulus Photoreceptors, 77, 845-855
Phototransdoction M. P. Gray-Keller, A. S. Polans, K. Palczewski, and P. B. De&viler The Effect of Recoverin-like Calcium-Binding Proteins on the Photore- sponse of Retinal Rods, 70, 523-531
J. Shin, E. A. Richard, and J. E. Lisman Ca2+ Is an Obligatory Intermediate in the Excitation Cascade of Limulus Photoreceptors, 77, 845-855
Pituitary K. Takimoto, A. F. Fomina, R. Gealy, J. S. Trimmer, and E. S. Levitan Dexamethasone Rapidly Induces Kv1.5 K+ Channel Gene Transcription and Expression in Clonal Pituitary Cells, 77, 359-369
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide H. Hashimoto, T. Ishihara, R. Shigemoto, K. Mori, and S. Nagata Molecular Cloning and Tissue Distribution of a Receptor for Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide, 77, 333-342
Pituitary cell K. Okano, J. R. Monck, and J. M. Fernandez GTPyS Stimulates Exocytosis in Patch-Clamped Melanotrophs, 71,165- 172
Platelet-activating factor (PAF) A. Wieraszko, G. Li, E. Kornecki, M. V. Hogan, and Y. H. Ehrlich Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus Induced by Platelet-Acti- vating Factor, 10, 553-557
Posttranslational modification K. Ozaki, H. Nagatani, M. Ozaki, and F. Tokunaga Maturation of Major Drosophila Rhodopsin, ninaE, Requires Chromo- phore 3-Hydroxyretinal, 70, 1113-1119
Potassium channel K. L. Choi, C. Mossman, J. Aub& and G. Yellen The Internal Quaternary Ammonium Receptor Site of Shaker Potassium Channels, 70, 533-541
C. E. Stansfeld, S. J. Marsh, A. J. Cibb, and D. A. Brown Identification of M-Channels in Outside-Out Patches Excised from Sym- pathetic Ganglion Cells, 70, 639-654
W. A. Twitchell and S. C. Rane Opioid Peptide Modulation of Ca’+-Dependent I(+ and Voltage-Activated Ca*+ Currents in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells, 70, 701-709
D. E. Logothetis, 8. F. Kammen, K. Lindpaintner, D. Bisbas, and B. Nadal- Ginard Cating Charge Differences between Two Voltage-Gated KC Channels Are Due to the Specific Charge Content of Their Respective 54 Regions, 70, 1121-1129
E. A. Schwartz L-Glutamate Conditionally Modulates the K’ Current of Miiller Clial Cells, 70, 1141-1149
N. V. Shen, X. Chen, M. M. Bayer, and P. J. Pfaffinger Deletion Analysis of K+ Channel Assembly, If, 67-76
N. V. Marrion Selective Reduction of One Mode of M-Channel Gating by Muscarine in Sympathetic Neurons, 77, n-84
X. M. Shao and D. M. Papazian S4 Mutations Alter the Single-Channel Cating Kinetics of Shaker K’ Channels, 77, 343-352
E. Perozo, R. MacKinnon, F. Bezanilla, and E. Stefani Gating Currents from a Nonconducting Mutant Reveal Open-Closed Conformations in Shaker K+ Channels, 77, 353-358
G. E. Kirsch, C.-C. Shieh, J. A. Drewe, D. F. Vener, and A. M. Brown Segmental Exchanges Define 4Aminopyridine Binding and the Inner Mouth of K+ Pores, 77, 503-512
P. A. Slesinger, Y. N. Jan, and L. Y. Jan The S4S5 Loop Contributes to the Ion-Selective Pore of Potassium Chan- nels, 11, 739-749
D. E. Patton, J. W. West, W. A. Catterall, and A. L. Coldin A Peptide Segment Critical for Sodium Channel Inactivation Functions as an Inactivation Gate in a Potassium Channel, 77, 967-974
P. Pedarzani and J. F. Storm PKA Mediates the Effects of Monoamine Transmitters of the K+ Current Underlying the Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Hippocampal Neu- rons, 77, 1023-1035
POU domain J. Oberdick, K. Schilling, R. J. Smeyne, J. G. Corbin, C. Bocchiaro, and J. I. Morgan Control of Segment-like Patterns of Gene Expression in the Mouse Cere- bellum, 70, 1007-1018
M. Xiang, L. Zhou, Y.-W. Peng, R. L. Eddy, T. B. Shows, and J. Nathans Bm-36: A POU Domain Gene Expressed in a Subset of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77, 689-701
H. Fujii and H. Hamada A CNS-Specific POU Transcription Factor, Brn-2, Is Required for Estab- lishing Mammalian Neural Cell Lineages, 77, 1197-1206
Presynaptic inhibition D. D. Fraser, K. Hoehn, S. Weiss, and B. A. MacVicar Arachidonic Acid Inhibits Sodium Currents and Synaptic Transmission in Cultured Striatal Neurons, 77, 633-644
Prodynorphin j. j. Lucas, B. MellstrBm, M. I. Colado, and 1. R. Naranjo Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: SerotoninIA Receptor Agonists Trigger Transactivation by c-fos of the Prodynorphin Gene in Spinal Cord Neu- rons, 70, 599-611
Neuron
Progenitor cell A. L. Vescovi, B. A. Reynolds, D. D. Fraser, and S. Weiss bFGF Regulates the Proliferative Fateof Unipotent (Neuronal) and Bipo- tent (Neuronal/Astroglial) ECF-Generated CNS Progenitor Cells, 71,951- 966
Progesterone receptor R. Rupprecht, J. M. H. M. Reul, T. Trapp, B. van Steensel, C. Wetzel, K. Damm, W. Zieglgsnsberger, and F. Holsboer Progesterone Receptor-Mediated Effects of Neuroactive Steroids, 77, 523-530
Proliferation M. B. Luskin Restricted Proliferation and Migration of Postnatally Generated Neu- rons Derived from the Forebrain Subventricular Zone, 77, 173-189
A. L. Vescovi, B. A. Reynolds, D. D. Fraser, and S. Weiss bFGF Regulates the Proliferative Fateof Unipotent (Neuronal) and Bipo- tent (NeuronalIAstroglial) EGF-Generated CNS Progenitor Cells, 77,951- 966
Prolinedirected kinase J. Biernat, N. Gustke, G. Drewes, E.-M. Mandelkow, and E. Mandelkow Phosphorylation of Serm Strongly Reduces Binding of Tau to Microtu- bules: Distribution between PHF-like lmmunoreactivity and Microtu- bule Binding, 77, 153-163
Promoter T. Timmusk, K. Palm, M. Metsis, T. Reintam, V. Paalme, M. Saarma, and H. Persson Multiple Promoters Direct Tissue-Specific Expression of the Rat BDNF Gene, 70, 475-489
Prostaglandin C/H synthase K. Yamagata, K. I. Andreasson, W. E. Kaufmann, C. A. Barnes, and P. F. Worley Expression of a Mitogen-Inducible Cyclooxygenase in Brain Neurons: Regulation by Synaptic Activity and Glucocorticoids, 71, 371-386
Protein kinase A G. F. Hall and K. S. Kosik Axotomy-Induced Neurofilament Phosphorylation Is inhibited In Situ by Microinjection of PKA and PKC Inhibitors into Identified Lamprey Neurons, 70, 613-625
E. M. C. Skoulakis, D. Kalderon, and R. L. Davis Preferential Expression in Mushroom Bodies of the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A and Its Role in Learning and Memory, 77, 197-208
P. Pedarzani and J. F. Storm PKA Mediates the Effects of Monoamine Transmitters of the K+ Current Underlying the Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Hippocampal Neu- rons, 77, 1023-1035
Protein kinase C H. R. Bourne and R. Nicoll Review: Molecular Machines Integrate Coincident Synaptic Signals, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (Suppl.), 65-75
J. Yang and R. W. Tsien Enhancement of N- and L-type Calcium Channel Currents by Protein Kinase C in Frog Sympathetic Neurons, 70, 127-136
G. F. Hall and K. S. Kosik Axotomy-Induced Neurofilament Phosphorylation Is Inhibited In Situ by Microinjection of PKA and PKC Inhibitors into Identified Lamprey Neurons, 70, 613-625
M. Divers&Pierluissi and K. Dunlap Distinct, Convergent Second Messenger Pathways Modulate Neuronal Calcium Currents, 70, 753-760
Protein kinase inhibitor L. C. Griffith, L. M. Verselis, K. M. Aitken, C. P. Kyriacou, W. Danho, and R. J. Greenspan Inhibition of Calcium/Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase in Dro- sophila Disrupts Behavioral Plasticity, 70, 501-509
G. F. Hall and K. S. Kosik Axotomy-Induced Neurofilament Phosphorylation Is Inhibited In Situ by Microinjection of PKA and PKC Inhibitors into identified Lamprey Neurons, 70, 613-625
Proteoglycan M. J. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, W. Hoch, R. H. Scheller, and 2. Hall The Ability of Agrin to Cluster AChRs Depends on Alternative Splicing and on Cell Surface Proteoglycans, 17, 491-502
Proteolipid protein Y. Yan, C. Lagenaur, and V. Narayanan Molecular Cloning of M6: Identification of a PLPlDM20 Gene Family, 71. 423-431
Proton T. A. Gilbertson, S. D. Roper, and S. C. Kinnamon Proton Currents through Amiloride-Sensitive Na+ Channels in Isolated Hamster Taste Cells: Enhancement by Vasopressin and CAMP, 10,931- 942
Psychopharmacology R. Rupprecht, J. M. H. M. Reul, T. Trapp, B. van Steensel, C. Wetzel, K. Damm, W. Zieglgtinsberger, and F. Holsboer Progesterone Receptor-Mediated Effects of Neuroactive Steroids, 77, 523-530
Purinergic receptor D. J. Mogul, M. E. Adams, and A. P. Fox Differential Activation of Adenosine Receptors Decreases N-type but Potentiates P-type Ca* Current in Hippocampal CA3 Neurons, 70,327- 334
Purkinje cell I. M. Mintz and B. P. Bean GABAe Receptor Inhibition of P-type Ca2+ Channels in Central Neurons, IO, 889-898
J. Oberdick, K. Schilling, R. J. Smeyne, J. G. Corbin, C. Bocchiaro, and J. I. Morgan Control of Segment-like Patterns of Gene Expression in the Mouse Cere- bellum, 70, 1007-1018
B. Barbour Synaptic Currents Evoked in Purkinje Cells by Stimulating Individual Granule Cells, 77, 759-769
P. Vincent and A. Marty Neighboring Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Communicate via Retrograde Inhibition of Common Presynaptic Interneurons, 71,885-893
D. 1. Linden, M. Smeyne, and J. A. Connor Induction of Cerebellar Long-Term Depression in Culture Requires Post- synaptic Action of Sodium Ions, 77, 1093-1100
Pyramidal cell W. Regehr, J. Kehoe, P. Ascher, and C. Armstrong Synaptically Triggered Action Potentials in Dendrites, 17, 145-151
Quantitative polymerase chain reaction B. 1. Jasmin, R. K. Lee, and R. L. Rotundo Compartmentalization of Acetylcholinesterase mRNA and Enzyme at the Vertebrate Neuromuscular Junction, 77, 467-477
Quaternary ammonium block K. L. Choi, C. Mossman, 1. Aube, and G. Yellen The Internal Quaternary Ammonium Receptor Site of Shaker Potassium Channels, 70, 533-541
L. O.Trussell, S. Zhang, and I. M. Raman Desensitization of AMPA Receptors upon Multiquantal Neurotransmit- ter Release, 70, 1185-1196
Rab protein K. Simons and M. Zerial Review: Rab Proteins and the Road Maps for Intracellular Transport, 71, 789-799
Subject Index for Kesearch Articles and Reviews, 1993
Rana catesbeiana Y.-y. Peng and R. S. Zucker Release of LHRH Is Linearly Related to the Time integral of Presynaptic Caz+ Elevation above a Threshold Level in Bullfrog Sympathetic Ganglia, 10,465-473
T. Akasu, M. Ito, T. Nakano, C. R. Schneider, M.A. Simmons, T. Tanaka, T. Tokimasa, and M. Yoshida Myosin Light Chain Kinase Occurs in Bullfrog Sympathetic Neurons and May Modulate Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents, 11, 1133- 1145
Receptor cloning R. C. Thompson, A. Mansour, H. Akil, and S. J. Watson Cloning and Pharmacological Characterization of a Rat p Opioid Recep tor, 11,903-913
Recombinant protein S. C. Britt, R. Feiler, K. Kirschfeld, and C. S. Zuker Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsin and Metarhodopsin In Vivo, 11, 29-39
Recoverin M. P. Gray-Keller, A. S. Polans, K. Palczewski, and P. B. Detwiler The Effect of Recoverin-like Calcium-Binding Proteins on the Photore- sponse of Retinal Rods, 10, 523-531 0. Pongs, J. Lindemeier, X. R. Zhu, T. Theil, D. Engelkamp, I. Krah- Jentgens, H.-G. Lambrecht, K. W. Koch, J. Schwemer, R. Rivosecchi, A. Mallart, J. Galceran, I. Canal, J. A. Barbas, and A. Fernis Frequenin-A Novel Calcium-Binding Protein That Modulates Synaptic Efficacy in the Drosophila Nervous System, 17, 15-28
Redox modulation L.-H. Tang and E. Aizenman Allosteric Modulation of the NMDA Receptor by Dihydrolipoic and Li- poic Acid in Rat Cortical Neurons In Vitro, 17, 857-663
Regeneration A. Wizenmann, E. Thies, S. Klostermann, F. Bonhoeffer, and M. Blhr Appearance of Target-Specific Guidance Information for Regenerating Axons after CNS Lesions, 17,975-983
Restrictin T. Briimmendorf, M. Hubert, U. Treubert, R. Leuschner, A. Tarnok, and F. G. Rathjen The Axonal Recognition Molecule Fll Is a Multifunctional Protein: Spe cific Domains Mediate Interactions with Ng-CAM and Restrictin, 70, 711-727
Retina S. H. DeVries and D. A. Baylor Review: Synaptic Circuitry of the Retina and Olfactory Bulb, Cell 72/ Neuron 70 (Suppl.), l39-149
C. M. Cahill and J. C. Besharse Circadian Clock Functions Localized in Xenopus Retinal Photorecep tars, 10, 573-577
M. E. Pierce, H. Sheshberadaran, 2. Zhang, L. E. Fox, M. L. Applebury, and J. S. Takahashi Circadian Regulation of lodopsin Gene Expression in Embryonic Photo- receptors in Retinal Cell Culture, 70, 579-584
K. Yoshida, K. Kawamura, and J. lmaki Consistent Expression of c-fos mRNA in Rat Retinal Cells: Regulation by Light/Dark Cycle, 70, 1049-1054
P. A. Raymond, L. K. Barthel, M. E. Rounsifer, S. A. Sullivan, and J. K. Knight Expression of Rod and ConeVisual Pigments in Goldfish and Zebrafish: A Rhodopsin-like Gene Is Expressed in Cones, 70, 1161-1174
5. C. Britt, R. Feiler, K. Kirschfeld, and C. S. Zuker Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsin and Metarhodopsin In Vivo, 77, 29-39
D. B. Dixon, K.-l. Takahashi, and D. R. Copenhagen L-Glutamate Suppresses HVA Calcium Current in Catfish Horizontal Cells by Raising Intracellular Proton Concentration, 77, 267-277
M. Xiang, L. Zhou, Y.-W. Peng, R. L. Eddy, T. B. Shows, and J. Nathans Bm-36: A POU Domain Gene Expressed in a Subset of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 17, 689-701
J. S. Diamond and D. R. Copenhagen The Contribution of NMDA and Non-NMDA Receptors to the Light- Evoked Input-Output Characteristics of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 11,725- 738
R. 0. L. Wong, M. Meister, and C. J. Shatz Transient Period of Correlated Bursting Activity during Development of the Mammalian Retina, 77, 923-938
A. Wizenmann, E. Thies, S. Klostermann, F. Bonhoeffer, and M. Blhr Appearance of Target-Specific Guidance Information for Regenerating Axons after CNS Lesions, 77, 975-983
Retinal degeneration G.-Q. Chang, Y. Hao, and F. Wong Apoptosis: Final Common Pathway of Photoreceptor Death in rd, rds, and Rhodopsin Mutant Mice, 71, 595-605
Retinal ganglion cell Y. Wakamatsu, Y. Watanabe, A. Shimono, and H. Kondoh Transition of Localization of the N-Myc Protein from Nucleus to Cyto- plasm in Differentiating Neurons, 70, l-9
D. W. Sretavan and L. F. Reichardt Time-Lapse Video Analysis of Retinal Ganglion Cell Axon Pathfinding at the Mammalian Optic Chiasm: Growth Cone Guidance Using Intrinsic Chiasm Cues, 70, 761-777
M. Xiang, L. Zhou, Y.-W. Peng, R. L. Eddy, T. 8. Shows, and J. Nathans Em-36: A POU Domain Gene Expressed in a Subset of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77, 689-701
J. S. Diamond and D. R. Copenhagen The Contribution of NMDA and Non-NMDA Receptors to the Light- Evoked Input-Output Characteristics of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77,725- 73a
Retinal wave R. 0. L. Wong, M. Meister, and C. J. Shatz Transient Period of Correlated Bursting Activity during Development of the Mammalian Retina, 77, 923-938
Retinitis pigmentosa G.-Q. Chang, Y. Hao, and F. Wong Apoptosis: Final Common Pathway of Photoreceptor Death in rd, rds, and Rhodopsin Mutant Mice, 77, 595-605
Retinoblastoma R. Weinberg Review: Tumor Suppressor Genes, 71, 191-196
Retinoic acid M. Kessel Reversal of Axonal Pathways from Rhombomere 3 Correlates with Extra Hox Expression Domains, 70, 379-393
A.-S. LaMantia, M. C. Colbert, and E. Linney Retinoic Acid Induction and Regional Differentiation Prefigure Olfac- tory Pathway Formation in the Mammalian Forebrain, 70, 1035-1048
D. R. Kaplan, K. Matsumoto, E. Lucarelli, and C. J. Thiele Induction of TrkB by Retinoic Acid Mediates Biologic Responsiveness to BDNF and Differentiation of Human Neuroblastoma Cells, 17, 321- 331
Retinoic acid receptor A.-S. LaMantia, M. C. Colbert, and E. Linney Retinoic Acid Induction and Regional Differentiation Prefigure Olfac- tory Pathway Formation in the Mammalian Forebrain, 70, 1035-1048
Retinotectal projection C. S. Goodman and C. J. Shatz Review: Developmental Mechanisms That Generate Precise Patterns of Neuronal Connectivity, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 77-98
E. Frank and P. Wenner Review: Environmental Specification of Neuronal Connectivity, 70,779- 705
Y. v. Boxberg, S. Deiss, and U. Schwarz Guidance and Topographic Stabilization of Nasal Chick Retinal Axons on Target-Derived Components In Vitro, 70, 345-357
NWVX!
Retinotopic map R. 0. L. Wong, M. Meister, and C. J. Shatz Transient Period of Correlated Bursting Activity during Development of the Mammalian Retina, 17, 923-938
Retrograde messenger J. H. Williams, Y.-G. Li, A. Nayak, M. L. Errington, K. P. S. J. Murphy, and T. V. P. Bliss The Suppression of Long-Term Potentiation in Rat Hippocampus by Inhibitorsof NitricOxideSynthaseIsTemperatureand AgeDependent, 11, 877484
Retrovirus S. W. Levison and J. E. Goldman Both Oligodendrocytes and Astrocytes Develop from Progenitors in the Subventricular Zone of Postnatal Rat Forebrain, 70, 201-212
Rhodopsin K. Ozaki, H. Nagatani, M. Ozaki, and F. Tokunaga Maturation of Major Drosophila Rhodopsin, ninaE, Requires Chromo- phore 3-Hydroxyretinal, 70, 1113-1119
S. G. Britt, R. Feiler, K. Kirschfeld, and C. S. Zuker Spectral Tuning of Rhodopsin and Metarhodopsin In Vivo, 11, 29-39
J. Jin, R. K. Crouch, D. W. Corson, B. M. Katz, E. F. MacNichol, and M. C. Cornwall Noncovalent Occupancy of the Retinal-Binding Pocket of Opsin Dimin- ishes Bleaching Adaptation of Retinal Cones, 71, 513-522
Rhombomere M. Kessel Reversal of Axonal Pathways from Rhombomere 3 Correlates with Extra Hox Expression Domains, IO, 379-393
H. Simon and A. Lumsden Rhombomere-Specific Origin of the Contralateral Vestibulo-Acoustic Efferent Neurons and Their Migration across the Embryonic Midline, 1 I. 209-220
RNA-binding protein R. J. Buckanovich, j. B. Posner, and R. B. Darnell Nova, the Paraneoplastic Ri Antigen, Is Homologous to an RNA-Binding Protein and Is Specifically Expressed in the Developing Motor System, 1 I. 657-672
RNA hybridization R. A. Hughes, M. Sendtner, M. Coldfarb, D. Lindholm, and H. Thoenen Evidence That Fibroblast Growth Factor 5 Is a Major Muscle-Derived Survival Factor for Cultured Spinal Motoneurons, IO, 369-377
RNA splicing W. Hoch, M. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, Z. W. Hall, and R. H. Scheller Developmental Regulation of Highly Active Alternatively Spliced Forms of Agrin, 11, 479-490
Rod cell M. P. Gray-Keller, A. S. Polans, K. Palczewski, and P. B. Dehviier The Effect of Recoverin-like Calcium-Binding Proteins on the Photore- sponse of Retinal Rods, 10, 523-531
W. BBnigk, W. Altenhofen, F. Miiller, A. Dose, M. Illing, R. S. Molday, and U. 8. Kaupp Rod and Cone Photoreceptor Cells Express Distinct Genes for cGMP- Gated Channels, 10, 865-877
J. K. Angleson and T. G. Wensel A CTPase-Accelerating Factor for Transducin, Distinct from Its Effector cCMP Phosphodiesterase, in Rod Outer Segment Membranes, 71,939- 949
Ryanodine receptor I. Bezprozvanny and B. E. Ehrlich ATP Modulates the Function of lnositol 1,4,5Trisphosphate-Cated Chan- nels at Two Sites, 10, 1175-1184
S4 region D. E. Logothetis, B. F. Kammen, K. Lindpaintner, D. Bisbas, and B. Nadal- Cinard Gating Charge Differences between Two Voltage-Gated K’ Channels Are Due to the Specific Charge Content of Their Respective S4 Regions, 10.1121-1129
Sauvagine C.-P. Chang, R. V. Pearse II, S. O’Connell, and M. C. Rosenfeld Identification of a Seven Transmembrane Helix Receptor for Corticotro- pin-Releasing Factor and Sauvagine in Mammalian Brain, 11,1187-1195
Schistocerca americana P. Diamond, A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, J. Booth, L. Park, T. P. O’Con- nor, and D. G. Jay Fasciclin I and II Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 11,409-421
SEC1 K. Gengyo-Ando, Y. Kamiya, A. Yamakawa, K.-i. Kodaira, K. Nishiwaki, J. Miwa, I. Hori, and R. Hosono The C. elegans uric-18 Gene Encodes a Protein Expressed in Motor Neu- rons, 11, 703-711
Secretion E. Neher and R. S. Zucker Multiple Calcium-Dependent Processes Related to Secretion in Bovine Chromaffin Cells, 10, 21-30
E. F. Stanley Single Calcium Channels and Acetylcholine Release at a Presynaptic Nerve Terminal, 11, 1007-1011
Secretory granule R. Bauerfeind, A. Rhgnier-Vigouroux, T. Flatmark, and W. B. Huttner Selective Storage of Acetylcholine, but Not Catecholamines, in Neuro- endocrine Synaptic-like Microvesicles of Early Endosomal Origin, 11, 105-121
Seizure K. Yamagata, K. I. Andreasson, W. E. Kaufmann, C. A. Barnes, and P. F. Worley Expression of a Mitogen-Inducible Cyclooxygenase in Brain Neurons: Regulation by Synaptic Activity and Glucocorticoids, 11, 371-386
Senile plaque G. W. Rebeck, J. S. Reiter, D. K. Strickland, and B. T. Hyman Apolipoprotein E in Sporadic Alzheimer’s Disease: Allelic Variation and Receptor Interactions, 71, 575-580
Sensory neuron A. M. Davies, K.-F. Lee, and R. Jaenisch p75-Deficient Trigeminal Sensory Neurons Have an Altered Response to NGF but Not to Other Neurotrophins, 17, 565-574
Sensory organ D. J. Merritt, A. Hawken, and P. M. Whitington The Role of the cot Gene in the Specification of Central Projections by Sensory Axons in Drosophila, 10, 741-752
Sensory transduction T. A. Gilbertson, S. D. Roper, and S. C. Kinnamon Proton Currents through Amiloride-Sensitive Na+ Channels in Isolated Hamster Taste Cells: Enhancement by Vasopressin and CAMP, 70,931- 942
S. J. Kleene Origin of the Chloride Current in Olfactory Transduction, 11, 123-132
Serine-threonine kinase J. Biernat, N. Gustke, G. Drewes, E.-M. Mandelkow, and E. Mandelkow Phosphorylation of Serza Strongly Reduces Binding of Tau to Microtu- bules: Distribution between PHF-like lmmunoreactivity and Microtu- bule Binding, 11, 153-163
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Serotonin B.-K. Kaang, E. R. Kandel, and S. G. N. Grant Activation of CAMP-Responsive Genes by Stimuli That Produce Long- Term Facilitation in Aplysia Sensory Neurons, 70, 427-435
D. Bruns, F. Engert, and H.-D. Lux A Fast Activating Presynaptic Reuptake Current during Serotonergic Transmission in Identified Neurons of Hirudo, 70, 559-572
Y. Hu, A. Barzilai, M. Chen, C. H. Bailey, and E. R. Kandel EHT and CAMP Induce the Formation of Coated Pits and Vesicles and Increase the Expression of Clathrin Light Chain in Sensory Neurons of Aplysia, 70, 921-929
S. Schacher, E. R. Kandel, and P.-G. Montarolo CAMP and Arachidonic Acid Simulate Long-Term Structural and Func- tional Changes Produced by Neurotransmitters in Aplysia Sensory Neu- rons, 70,1079-1088
P. Pedarzani and J. F. Storm PKA Mediates the Effects of Monoamine Transmitters of the K+Current Underlying the Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Hippocampal Neu- rons, 77, 1023-1035
Serotonin receptor R. Andrade Enhancement of p-Adrenergic Responses byCrLinked Receptors in Rat Hippocampus, 70,83-88
J. J. Lucas, B. MellstrBm, M. I. Colado, and J. R. Naranjo Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: Serotonin,A Receptor Agonists Trigger Transactivation by c-fos of the Prodynorphin Gene in Spinal Cord Neu- rons, 70, 599-611
T. W. Lovenberg, 6. M. Baron, L. de Lecea, J. D. Miller, R. A. Prosser, M. A. Rea, P. E. Foye, M. Racke, A. L. Slone, B. W. Siegel, P. E. Danielson, J. C. Sutcliffe, and M. C. Erlander A Novel Adenylyl Cyclase-Activating Serotonin Receptor (5-HT7) Impli- cated in the Regulation of Mammalian Circadian Rhythms, 77,449-458
Shaker channel X. M. Shao and D. M. Papazian S4 Mutations Alter the Single-Channel Gating Kinetics of Shaker K+ Channels, 77, 343-352
E. Perozo, R. MacKinnon, F. Bezanilla, and E. Stefani Gating Currents from a Nonconducting Mutant Reveal Open-Closed Conformations in Shaker K+ Channels, 77, 353-358
D. E. Patton, J. W. West, W. A. Catterall, and A. L. Goldin A Peptide Segment Critical for Sodium Channel Inactivation Functions as an Inactivation Gate in a Potassium Channel, 77, 967-974
Signal transduction P. Pesheva, G. Gennarini, C. Goridis, and M. Schachner The F3/11 Cell Adhesion Molecule Mediates the Repulsion of Neurons by the Extracellular Matrix Glycoprotein Jl-160/180, 70, 69-82
B. MellstrGm, J. R. Naranjo, N. S. Foulkes, M. Lafarga, and P. Sassone Corsi Transcriptional Response to CAMP in Brain: Specific Distribution and Induction of CREM Antagonists, 70, 655-665
W. Banigk, W. Altenhofen, F. Mijller, A. Dose, M. Illing, R. S. Molday, and U. B. Kaupp Rod and Cone Photoreceptor Cells Express Distinct Genes for cGMP- Gated Channels, 70,865-877
Singlecell cloning T. J. Kilpatrick and P. F. Bartlett Cloningand Growthof Multipotential Neural Precursors: Requirements for Proliferation and Differentiation, 70, 255-265
Site-directed mutagenesis C. E. Kirsch, C.-C. Shieh, J. A. Drewe, D. F. Vener, and A. M. Brown Segmental Exchanges Define 4Aminopyridine Binding and the Inner Mouth of K+ Pores, 77, 503-512
S. Tang, A. Yatani, A. Bahinski, Y. Mori, and A. Schwartz Molecular Localization of Regions in the L-type Calcium Channel Criti- cal for Dihydropyridine Action, 77, 1013-1021
J. Kuhse, B. Laube, D. Magalei, and H. Betz Assembly of the Inhibitory Glycine Receptor: Identification of Amino Acid Sequence Motifs Governing Subunit Stoichiometry, 77,1049-1056
Sodium channel S. C. Cannon and S. M. Strittmatter Functional Expression of Sodium Channel Mutations Identified in Fami- lies with Periodic Paralysis, 70, 317-326
J. S. Yang, P. B. Bennett, N. Makita, A. L. George, and R. L. Barchi Expression of the Sodium Channel b1 Subunit in Rat Skeletal Muscle Is Selectively Associated with the Tetrodotoxin-Sensitive a Subunit Is@ form, 77,915-922
J. A. White, A. Alonso, and A. R. Kay A Heart-like Na+Current in the Medial Entorhinal Cortex, 77,1037-1047
Sodium current K. Hoehn, T. W. J. Watson, and B. A. MacVicar A Novel Tetrodotoxin-Insensitive, Slow Sodium Current in Striatal and Hippocampal Neurons, 70, 543-552
W. Regehr, J. Kehoe, P. Ascher, and C. Armstrong Synaptically Triggered Action Potentials in Dendrites, 77, 145-151
D. D. Fraser, K. Hoehn, S. Weiss, and B. A. MacVicar Arachidonic Acid Inhibits Sodium Currents and Synaptic Transmission in Cultured Striatal Neurons, 77, 633-644
Somatostatin M. S. Shapiro and B. Hille Substance P and Somatostatin Inhibit Calcium Channels in Rat Sympa- thetic Neurons via Different C Protein Pathways, 70,11-20
J. N. Coulombe, R. Schwall, A. S. Parent, F. P. Eckenstein, and R. Nishi Induction of Somatostatin lmmunoreactivity in Cultured Ciliary Can- glion Neurons by Activin in Choroid Cell-Conditioned Medium, 70, 899406
Spermine V. S. Vorobjev, I. N. Sharonova, I. B. Walsh, and H. L. Haas Histamine Potentiates N-Methyl-o-Aspartate Responses in Acutely Iso- lated Hippocampal Neurons, 77,837-844
Spinal cord 1. J. Lucas, B. Mellstrbm, M. I. Colado, and J. R. Naranio Molecular Mechanisms of Pain: SerotoninqA Receptor Agonists Trigger Transactivation by c-fos of the Prodynorphin Gene in Spinal Cord Neu- rons, 70, 599-611
Spinal cord neuron I. M. Mintz and B. P. Bean GABAe Receptor Inhibition of P-type Ca2+ Channels in Central Neurons, 70, 889-898
Spinal ganglion Y. Wakamatsu, Y. Watanabe, A. Shimono, and H. Kondoh Transition of Localization of the N-Myc Protein from Nucleus to Cyto- plasm in Differentiating Neurons, 70, l-9
Spontaneous activity R. 0. L. Wong, M. Meister, and C. J. Shatz Transient Period of Correlated Bursting Activity during Development of the Mammalian Retina, 77, 923-938
Squalus acanthias K. Kitagawa, M. P. Sinoway, C. Yang, R. M. Gould, and D. R. Colman A Proteolipid Protein Gene Family: Expression in Sharks and Rays and Possible Evolution from an Ancestral Gene Encoding a Pore-Forming Polypeptide, 77, 433-448
Stellate cell P. Vincent and A. Marty Neighboring Cerebellar Purkinje Cells Communicate via Retrograde Inhibition of Common Presynaptic Interneurons, 77, 885-893
Steriod K. Takimoto, A. F. Fomina, R. Gealy, J, S. Trimmer, and E. S. Levitan Dexamethasone Rapidly Induces Kv1.5 K+ Channel Gene Transcription and Expression in Clonal Pituitary Cells, 77, 359-369
Striatum K. Hoehn, T. W. J. Watson, and B. A. MacVicar A Novel Tetrodotoxin-Insensitive, Slow Sodium Current in Striatal and Hippocampal Neurons, 70, 543-552
P. Calabresi, A. Pisani, N. B. Mercuri, and C. Bernardi Lithium Treatment Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Stria- turn, 70, 955-962
D. D. Fraser, K. Hoehn, S. Weiss, and 8. A. MacVicar Arachidonic Acid Inhibits Sodium Currents and Synaptic Transmission in Cultured Striatal Neurons, 77, 633-644
A. L. Vescovi, B. A. Reynolds, D. D. Fraser, and S. Weiss bFGF Regulates the Proliferative Fateof Unipotent (Neuronal) and Bipo- tent (Neuronal/Astroglial) ECF-Generated CNS Progenitor Cells, 77,951- 966
Structure-function relationship D. E. Logothetis, B. F. Kammen, K. Lindpaintner, D. Bisbas, and B. Nadal- Cinard Cating Charge Differences between Two Voltage-Gated K+ Channels Are Due to the Specific Charge Content of Their Respective S4 Regions, 70, 1121-1129
Subcellular localization P. Litman, J. Barg, L. Rindzoonski, and I. Ginzburg Subcellular Localization of Tau mRNA in Differentiating Neuronal Cell Culture: Implications for Neuronal Polarity, 70, 627-638
Substance P M. S. Shapiro and B. Hille Substance Pand Somatostatin Inhibit Calcium Channels in Rat Sympa- thetic Neurons via Different G Protein Pathways, 70, II-20
Subunit assembly N. V. Shen, X. Chen, M. M. Boyer, and P. J. Pfaffinger Deletion Analysis of KC Channel Assembly, 77, 67-76
J. Kuhse, B. Laube, D. Magalei, and H. Betz Assembly of the Inhibitory Glycine Receptor: Identification of Amino Acid Sequence Motifs Governing Subunit Stoichiometry, 77,1049-1056
Subventricular zone M. B. Luskin Restricted Proliferation and Migration of Postnatally Generated Neu- rons Derived from the Forebrain Subventricular Zone, 77, 173-189
Superinduction M. E. Fuentes and P. Taylor Control of Acetylcholinesterase Gene Expression during Myogenesis, 70, 679-687
Superior cervical ganglion J. A. Kessler, W. H. Ludlam, M. M. Freidin, D. H. Hall, M. D. Michaelson, D. C. Spray, M. Dougherty, and D. K. Batter Cytokine-Induced Programmed Death of Cultured Sympathetic Neu- rons, 77, 1123-1132
Superior colliculus A. Wizenmann, E. Thies, S. Klostermann, F. Bonhoeffer, and M. BIhr Appearance of Target-Specific Guidance Information for Regenerating Axons after CNS Lesions, 77, 975-983
J. iakeuchi, W. Shannon, N. Aronin, and W. J. Schwartz Compositional Changes of AP-1 DNA-Binding Proteins Are Regulated by Light in a Mammalian Circadian Clock, 77, 825-836
SV40 l-antigen J. P. Hammang, R. R. Behringer, E. E. Baetge, R. D. Palmiter, R. L. Brinster, and A. Messing Oncogene Expression in Retinal Horizontal Cells of Transgenic Mice Results in a Cascade of Neurodegeneration, 70, 1197-1209
Sympathetic ganglion cell J. Yang and R. W. Tsien Enhancement of N- and L-type Calcium Channel Currents by Protein Kinase C in Frog Sympathetic Neurons, 70, 127-136
Y.-y. Peng and R. S. Zucker Release of LHRH Is Linearly Related to the Time Integral of Presynaptic CaZ’ Elevation above aThreshold Level in Bullfrog Sympathetic Ganglia, 70,465-473
C. E. Stansfeld, S. J. Marsh, A. J. Gibb, and D.A. Brown Identification of M-Channels in Outside-Out Patches Excised from Sym- pathetic Ganglion Cells, 70, 639-654
T.Akasu, M. Ito,T. Nakano, C. R. Schneider, M.A. Simmons,T. Tanaka, T. Tokimasa, and M. Yoshida Myosin Light Chain Kinase Occurs in Bullfrog Sympathetic Neurons and May Modulate Voltage-Dependent Potassium Currents, 77, 1133- 1145
Sympathetic nervous system G. W. Hoyle, E. H. Mercer, R. D. Palmiter, and R. L. Brinster Expression of NGF in Sympathetic Neurons Leads to Excessive Axon Outgrowth from Ganglia but Decreased Terminal Innervation within Tissues, 70, 1019-1034
Synapse Z. W. Hall and J. R. Sanes Review: Synaptic Structure and Development: The Neuromuscular Junc- tion, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (Suppl.), 99-121
Y. Hata, B. Davletov, A. G. Petrenko, R. Jahn, and T. C. Siidhof Interaction of Synaptotagmin with thecytoplasmic Domains of Neurex- ins, 70, 307-315
M. M. Maimone and J. P. Merlie Interaction of the 43 kd Postsynaptic Protein with All Subunits of the Muscle Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor, 77, 53-66
S. F. Traynelis, R. A. Silver, and S. C. Cull-Candy Estimated Conductanceof Glutamate Receptor Channels Activated dur- ing EPSCs at the Cerebellar Mossy Fiber-Granule Cell Synapse, 77,279- 289
W. Hoch, M. Ferns, J. T. Campanelli, Z. W. Hall, and R. H. Scheller Developmental Regulation of Highly Active Alternatively Spliced Forms of Agrin, 77, 479-490
K. Broadie and M. Bate Activity-Dependent Development of the Neuromuscular Synapse dur- ing Drosophila Embryogenesis, 77, 607-619
K. Cengyo-Ando, Y. Kamiya, A. Yamakawa, K.-i. Kodaira, K. Nishiwaki, J. Miwa, I. Hori, and R. Hosono The C. elegans uric-78 Gene Encodes a Protein Expressed in Motor Neu- rons, 77, 703-711
B. Barbour Synaptic Currents Evoked in Purkinje Cells by Stimulating Individual Granule Cells, 77, 759-769
R. J. Balice-Gordon, C. K. Chua, C. C. Nelson, and J. W. Lichtman Gradual Loss of Synaptic Cartels Precedes Axon Withdrawal at Devel- oping Neuromuscular Junctions, 77, 801-815
Synaptic depression D. D. Fraser, K. Hoehn, S. Weiss, and B. A. MacVicar Arachidonic Acid Inhibits Sodium Currents and Synaptic Transmission in Cultured Striatal Neurons, 77, 633-644
Synaptic plasticity A. Wieraszko, C. Li, E. Kornecki, M. V. Hogan, and Y. H. Ehrlich Long-Term Potentiation in the Hippocampus Induced by Platelet-Acti- vating Factor, 70, 553-557
Synaptic transmission T. M. Jessell and E. R. Kandel Review: Synaptic Transmission: A Bidirectional and Self-Modifiable Form of Cell-Cell Communication, Cell 7Z/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), I-30
R. B. Kelly Review: Storage and Release of Neurotransmitters, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 43-53
C. F. Stevens Review: Quanta1 Release of Neurotransmitter and Long-Term Potentia- tion, Cel 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 55-63
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
H. R. Bourne and R. Nicoll Review Molecular Machines Integrate Coincident Synaptic Signals, Cell 7ZNeuron 70 (Suppl.), 65-75
S. H. DeVries and D. A. Baylor Review: Synaptic Circuitry of the Retina and Olfactory Bulb, Cell 72/ Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 139-149
J. S. Isaacson, J. M. Solis, and R. A. Nicoll Local and Diffuse Synaptic Actions of GABA in the Hippocampus, 70, 165-175
D. Bruns, F. Engert, and H.-D. Lux A Fast Activating Presynaptic Reuptake Current during Serotonergic Transmission in Identified Neurons of Hirudo, 70, 559-572
P. Calabresi, A. Pisani, N. B. Mercuri, and G. Bernardi Lithium Treatment Blocks Long-Term Synaptic Depression in the Stria- turn, 70, 955-962
N. Otmakhov, A. M. Shirke, and R. Malinow Measuring the Impact of Probabilistic Transmission on Neuronal Out- put, 70,1101-1111
0. Pongs, J. Lindemeier, X. R. Zhu, T. Theil, D. Engelkamp, I. Krah- Jentgens, H.-G. Lambrecht, K. W. Koch, J. Schwemer, R. Rivosecchi,A. Mallart, J. Calceran, I. Canal, J. A. Barbas, and A. Ferrus Frequenin-A Novel Calcium-Binding Protein That Modulates Synaptic Efficacy in the Drosophila Nervous System, 77, 15-28
K. J. Swartz Modulation of CaZ+ Channels by Protein Kinase C in Rat Central and Peripheral Neurons: Distribution of C Protein-Mediated Inhibition, 77, 305-320
R. Robitaille, M. L. Garcia, C. J. Kaczorowski, and M. P. Charlton Functional Colocalization of Calcium and Calcium-Gated Potassium Chan- nels in Control of Transmitter Release, 77, 645-655
J. S. Diamond and D. R. Copenhagen The Contribution of NMDA and Non-NMDA Receptors to the Light- Evoked Input-Output Characteristics of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77,725- 738
J. I. Luebke, K. Dunlap, and T. J. Turner MultipleCalcium Channel Types Control Glutamatergic SynapticTrans- mission in the Hippocampus, 77,895~902
Synaptic vesicle Y. Hata, B. Davletov, A. G. Petrenko, R. Jahn, and T. C. Sudhof Interaction of Synaptotagmin with the Cytoplasmic Domains of Neurex- ins, 70, 307-315
R. Bauerfeind, A. Regnier-Vigouroux, T. Flatmark, and W. B. Huttner Selective Storage of Acetylcholine, but Not Catecholamines, in Neuro- endocrine Synaptic-like Microvesicles of Early Endosomal Origin, 77, 105-121
T. A. Ryan, H. Reuter, B. Wendland, F. E. Schweizer, R. W. Tsien, and S. J. Smith The Kinetics of Synaptic Vesicle Recycling Measured at Single Presynap tic Boutons, 77, 713-724
Synaptogenesis K. R. Wagner, J. B. Cohen, and R. L. Huganir The 87K Postsynaptic Membrane Protein from Torpedo Is a Protein- Tyrosine Kinase Substrate Homologous to Dystrophin, 70, 511-522
2. Dai and H. B. Peng Elevation in Presynaptic Ca?+ Level Accompanying Initial Nerve-Muscle Contact in Tissue Culture, 70, 827-837
A. M. Craig, C. D. Blackstone, R. L. Huganir, and G. Banker The Distribution of Glutamate Receptors in Cultured Rat Hippocampal Neurons: Postsynapticclusteringof AMPA-SelectiveSubunits, 70,1055- 1068
L. R. Funte and P. G. Haydon Synaptic Target Contact Enhances Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Activat- ing CAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase during Synaptogenesis, 70,1069- 1078
Synaptotagmin Y. Hata, B. Davletov, A. C. Petrenko, R. Jahn, and T. C. Sudhof Interaction of Synaptotagmin with the Cytoplasmic Domains of Neurex- ins, 70, 307-315
Syntrophin M. E. Adams, M. H. Butler, T. M. Dwyer, M. F. Peters, A. A. Murnane, and S. C. Froehner Two Forms of Mouse Syntrophin, a 58 kd Dystrophin-Associated Pro- tein, Differ in Primary Structure and Tissue Distribution, 77, 531-548
Targeted mutagenesis H. Tomasiewicz, K. Ono, D. Yee, C. Thompson, C. Goridis, U. Rutis- hauser, and T. Magnuson Genetic Deletion of a Neural Cell Adhesion Molecule Variant (N-CAM- 180) Produces Distinct Defects in the Central Nervous System, 77,1163- 1174
Taste T. A. Gilbertson, S. D. Roper, and S. C. Kinnamon Proton Currents through AmilorideSensitive Na+ Channels in Isolated Hamster Taste Cells: Enhancement by Vasopressin and CAMP, 70,931- 942
Tau P. Litman, J. Barg, L. Rindzoonski, and I. Ginzburg Subcellular Localization of Tau mRNA in Differentiating Neuronal Cell Culture: Implications for Neuronal Polarity, 70, 627-638
G. T. Bramble& M. Goedert, R. lakes, S. E. Merrick, J. Q. Trojanowski, and V. M.-Y. Lee Abnormal Tau Phosphorylation at Ser p)6 in Alzheimer’s Disease Recapit- ulates Development and Contributes to Reduced Microtubule Binding, 70, 1089-1099
M. Morishima-Kawashima, M. Hasegawa, K. Takio, M. Suzuki, K. Titani, and Y. lhara Ubiquitin Is Conjugated with Amino-Terminally Processed Tau in Paired Helical Filaments, 70, 1151-1168
Tetraethylammonium K. L. Choi, C. Mossman, J. Aube, and C. Yellen The Internal Quaternary Ammonium Receptor Siteof ShakerPotassium Channels, 70, 533-541
E. Perozo, R. MacKinnon, F. Bezanilla, and E. Stefani Gating Currents from a Nonconducting Mutant Reveal Open-Closed Conformations in Shaker K+ Channels, 77, 353-358
Tetrodotoxin J. A. White, A. Alonso, and A. R. Kay A Heart-like Na+ Current in the Medial Entorhinal Cortex, 77,1037-1047
Thioctic acid L.-H. Tang and E. Aizenman Allosteric Modulation of the NMDA Receptor by Dihydrolipoic and Li- poic Acid in Rat Cortical Neurons In Vitro, 77, 857-863
Thymus K. A. Wood, B. Dipasquale, and R. J. Youle In Situ Labeling of Granule Cells for Apoptosis-Associated DNA Frag- mentation Reveals Different Mechanisms of Cell Loss in Developing Cerebellum, 77, 621-632
Til neuron P. Diamond, A. Mallavarapu, J. Schnipper, J. Booth, L. Park, T. P. Q’Con- nor, and D. C. Jay Fasciclin I and II Have Distinct Roles in the Development of Grasshopper Pioneer Neurons, 77, 409-421
Time-lapse microscopy C.-B. Chien, D. E. Rosenthal, W. A. Harris, and C. E. Holt Navigational Errors Made by Growth Cones without Filopodia in the Embryonic Xenopus Brain, 77, 237-251
Torpedo californica K. Kitagawa, M. P. Sinoway, C. Yang, R. M. Gould, and D. R. Colman A Proteolipid Protein Gene Family: Expression in Sharks and Rays and Possible Evolution from an Ancestral Gene Encoding a Pore-Forming Polypeptide, 77, 433-448
M. E. Adams, M. J-l. Butler, T. M. Dwyer, M. F. Peters, A. A. Murnane, and S. C. Froehner Two Forms of Mouse Syntrophin, a 58 kd Dystrophin-Associated Pro- tein, Differ in Primary Structure and Tissue Distribution, 77, 531-540
Transcriptional regulation A.-S. LaMantia, M. C. Colbert, and E. Linney Retinoic Acid induction and Regional Differentiation Prefigure Olfac- tory Pathway Formation in the Mammalian Forebrain, 70, 1035-1048
Transcription factor B. Mellstrom, J. R. Naranjo, N. S. Foulkes, M. Lafarga, and P. Sassone- Corsi Transcriptional Response to CAMP in Brain: Specific Distribution and Induction of CREM Antagonists, 70, 655-665
M. Xiang, L. Zhou, Y.-W. Peng, R. L. Eddy, T. B. Shows, and J. Nathans Bm-36: A POU Domain Gene Expressed in a Subset of Retinal Ganglion Cells, 77, 689-701
H. Fujii and H. Hamada A CNS-Specific POU Transcription Factor, Brn-2, Is Required for Estab- lishing Mammalian Neural Cell Lineages, 77, 1197-1206
Transformation M. Kessel Reversal of Axonal Pathways from Rhombomere 3 Correlates with Extra Hox Expression Domains, 70, 379-393
Transforming growth factor p WFP) N. K. Mahanthappa and C. A. Schwarting Peptide Growth Factor Control of Olfactory Neurogenesis and Neuron Survival In Vitro: Roles of EGF and TNF-Bs, 70, 293-305
Transgenic mouse M. J. Carson, R. R. Behringer, R. L. Brinster, and F. A. McMorris Insulin-like Growth Factor I Increases Brain Growth and Central Ner- vous System Myelination in Transgenic Mice, 70, 729-740
A.-S. LaMantia, M. C. Colbert, and E. Linney Retinoic Acid Induction and Regional Differentiation Prefigure Olfac- tory Pathway Formation in the Mammalian Forebrain, 70,1035-1048
G. W. Hoyle, E. H. Mercer, R. D. Palmiter, and R. L. Brinster Expression of NCF in Sympathetic Neurons Leads to Excessive Axon Outgrowth from Ganglia but Decreased Terminal Innervation within Tissues, 70, 1019-1034
J. P. Hammang, R. R. Behringer,E. E. Baetge, R. D. Palmiter, R. L. Brinster, and A. Messing Oncogene Expression in Retinal Horizontal Cells of Transgenic Mice Results in a Cascade of Neurodegeneration, 70,1197-1209
A. M. Davies, K.-F. Lee, and R. Jaenisch p7IDeficient Trigeminai Sensory Neurons Have an Altered Response to NCF but Not to Other Neurotrophins, 77, 565-574
Trk D. M. Valenzuela, P. C. Maisonpierre, D. J. Glass, E. Rojas, L. Nutiez, Y. Kong, D. R. Gies, T. N. Stitt, N. Y. Ip, and G. D. Yancopoulos Alternative Forms of Rat TrkC with Different Functional Capabilities, 70, 963-974
P. Tsoulfas, D. Soppet, E. Escandon, L. Tessarollo, J.-L. Mendoza-Ramirez, A. Rosenthal, K. Nikolics, and L. F. Parada The Rat trkC Locus Encodes Multiple Neurogenic ReceptorsThat Exhibit Differential Response to Neurotrophin-3 in PC12 Cells, 70, 975-990
D. R. Kaplan, K. Matsumoto, E. Lucarelli, and C. J. Thiele Induction of TrkB by Retinoic Acid Mediates Biologic Responsiveness to BDNF and Differentiation of Human Neuroblastoma Cells, 77, 321- 331
Trk receptor N. Y. Ip, T. N. Stitt, P. Tapley, R. Klein, D. J. Glass, J. Fandl, L. A. Greene, M. Barbacid, and C. D. Yancopoulos Similarities and Differences in the Way Neurotrophins Interact with the Trk Receptors in Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells, 70, 137-149
J.-P, Merlio, P. Ernfors, Z. Kokaia, D. S. Middlemas, J. Bengzon, M. Ko- kaia, M.-L. Smith, B. K. Siesjo, 1. Hunter, 0. Lindvall, and H. Persson Increased Production of theTrkB Protein Tyrosine Kinase Receptor after Brain Insults, 70, 151-164
E. DiCicco-Bloom, W. J. Friedman, and I. B. Black NT-3 Stimulates Sympathetic Neuroblast Proliferation by Promoting Pre- cursor Survival, 77, 1101-1111
Tumor antigen R. J. Buckanovich, J. B. Posner, and R. B. Darnell Nova, the Paraneoplastic Ri Antigen, Is Homologous to an RNA-Binding Protein and Is Specifically Expressed in the Developing Motor System, 7 7, 657-672
Tumor necrosis factor a CTCFa) J.-L. Tchelingerian, J. Quinonero, J. Booss, and C. Jacque Localization of TNFa and IL-la lmmunoreactivities in Striatal Neurons after Surgical Injury to the Hippocampus, 70, 213-224
Tumor suppressor gene R. Weinberg Review: Tumor Suppressor Genes, 77, 191-196
Tyrosine kinase P. Tsoulfas, D. Soppet, E. Escandon, L. Tessarollo, J.-L. Mendoza-Ramirez, A. Rosenthal, K. Nikolics, and L. F. Parada The Rat trkC Locus Encodes Multiple Neurogenic Receptors That Exhibit Differential Response to Neurotrophin-3 in PC12 Cells, 70, 975-990
Tyrosine kinase receptor V. E. Koliatsos, R. E. Clatterbuck, J. W. Winslow, M. H. Cayouette, and D. L. Price Evidence That Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Is a Trophic Factor for Motor Neurons In Vivo, 70, 359-367
Ubiquitin M. Morishima-Kawashima, M. Hasegawa, K. Takio, M. Suzuki, K. Titani, and Y. lhara Ubiquitin IsConjugatedwith Amino-Terminally ProcessedTau in Paired Helical Filaments, 70, 1151-1160
M. G. Muralidhar and J. B. Thomas The Drosophila bendless Gene Encodes a Neural Protein Related to Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, 77, 253-266
uric-78 gene K. Gengyo-Ando, Y. Kamiya, A. Yamakawa, K.-i. Kodaira, K. Nishiwaki, J. Miwa, I. Hori, and R. Hosono The C. elegans uric-78 Gene Encodes a Protein Expressed in Motor Neu- rons, 77, 703-711
Vasopressin T. A. Gilbertson, S. D. Roper, and S. C. Kinnamon Proton Currents through Amiloride-Sensitive Na’ Channels in Isolated Hamster Taste Cells: Enhancement by Vasopressin and CAMP, 70,931- 942
Vestibular system P. G. Gillespie, M. C. Wagner, and A. J. Hudspeth Identification of a 120 kd Hair-Bundle Myosin Located Near Stereociliary Tips, 77, 581-594
Vestibule-acoustic neuron H. Simon and A. Lumsden Rhombomere-Specific Origin of the Contralateral Vestibule-Acoustic Efferent Neurons and Their Migration across the Embryonic Midline, 77.209-220
Visual cortex K. Yamagata, K. I. Andreasson, W. E. Kaufmann, C. A. Barnes, and P. F. Worley Expression of a Mitogen-Inducible Cyclooxygenase in Brain Neurons: Regulation by Synaptic Activity and Glucocorticoids, 77, 371-386
Subject Index for Research Articles and Reviews, 1993
Visual pigment M. E. Pierce, H. Sheshberadaran, Z. Zhang, L. E. Fox, M. L. Applebury, and j. S. Takahashi Circadian Regulation of lodopsin Gene Expression in Embryonic Photo- receptors in Retinal Cell Culture, 70, 579-584
J. Jin, R. K. Crouch, D. W. Corson, B. M. Katz, E. F. MacNichol, and M. C. Cornwall
J. A. White, A. Alonso, and A. R. Kay A Heart-like Na+ Current in the Medial Entorhinal Cortex, 77,1037-1047
Noncovalent Occupancy of the Retinal-Binding Pocket of Opsin Dimin- ishes Bleaching Adaptation of Retinal Cones, 77, 513-522
Visual system C. S. Goodman and C. J. Shatz Review: Developmental Mechanisms That Generate Precise Patterns of Neuronal Connectivity, Cell 72/Neuron 70 (SuppI.), 77-98
D. W. Sretavan and L. F. Reichardt Time-Lapse Video Analysis of Retinal Ganglion Cell Axon Pathfinding at the Mammalian Optic Chiasm: Growth Cone Guidance Using Intrinsic Chiasm Cues, 10, 761-777
Visual transduction 1. K. Angleson and T. G. Wensel A GTPa<e-Accelerating Factor for Transducin, Distinct from Its Effector cGMP Phosphodiesterase, in Rod Outer Segment Membranes, 77,939- 949
Voltage-clamp analysis S. D. Donevan and M. A. Rogawski GYKI 52466, a2,3-Benzodiazepine, Isa Highly Selective, Noncompetitive Antagonist of AMPA/Kainate Receptor Responses, 70, 51-59
S. Mager, J. Naeve, M. Quick, C. Labarca, N. Davidson, and H. A. Lester Steady States, Charge Movements, and Rates for a Cloned GABA Trans- porter Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes, 70, 177-188
R. A. Pearce Physiological Evidence for Two Distinct GABAA Responses in Rat Hippo- campus, 70, 189-200
D. J. Mogul, M. E. Adams, and A. P. Fox Differential Activation of Adenosine Receptors Decreases N-type but Potentiates P-type Ca2+Current in Hippocampal CA3 Neurons, 70,327- 334
E. Perozo, R. MacKinnon, F. Bezanilla, and E. Stefani Gating Currents from a Nonconducting Mutant Reveal Open-Closed Conformations in Shaker K’ Channels, 77, 353-358
Voltagedependent ion channel D. E. Logothetis, B. F. Kammen, K. Lindpaintner, D. Bisbas, and B. Nadal- Cinard Gating Charge Differences between Two Voltage-Cated K+ Channels Are Due to the Specific Charge Content of Their Respective S4 Regions, 70,1121-1129
X. M. Shao and D. M. Papazian S4 Mutations Alter the Single-Channel Gating Kinetics of Shaker K’
Channels, 77, 343-352
Writ gene G. M. Shackleford, K. Willert, J. Wang, and H. E. Varmus The Writ-7 Proto-Oncogene Induces Changes in Morphology, Gene Ex- pression, and Growth Factor Responsiveness in PC12 Cells, 77,865-875
Xenopus laevis oocyte 5. Mager, J. Naeve, M. Quick, C. Labarca, N. Davidson, and H. A. Lester Steady States, Charge Movements, and Rates for a Cloned GABA Trans- porter Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes, 70, 177-188
K. Williams, S. L. Russell, Y. M. Shen, and P. B. Molinoff Developmental Switch in the Expression of NMDA Receptors Occurs In Vivo and In Vitro, 70, 267-278
C. E. Kirsch, C.-C. Shieh, J. A. Drewe, D. F. Vener, and A. M. Brown Segmental Exchanges Define 4Aminopyridine Binding and the Inner Mouth of K+ Pores, 77, 503-512
Zinc M. Hollmann, J. Boulter, C. Maron, L. Beasley, J. Sullivan, C. Pecht, and S. Heinemann Zinc Potentiates Agonist-induced Currents at Certain Splice Variants of the NMDA Receptor, 70, 943-954