Publications by authors named "Andy Baron"

Titin is a giant protein of striated muscle with important roles in the assembly, intracellular signalling and passive mechanical properties of sarcomeres. The molecule consists principally of approximately 300 immunoglobulin and fibronectin domains arranged in a chain more than 1 mum long. The isoform-dependent N-terminal part of the molecule forms an elastic connection between the end of the thick filament and the Z-line.

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The giant protein titin has important roles in muscle sarcomere integrity, elasticity and contractile activity. The key role in elasticity was highlighted in recent years by single-molecule mechanical studies, which showed a direct relationship between the non-uniform structure of titin and the hierarchical mechanism of its force-extension behavior. Further advances in understanding mechanisms controlling sarcomere structure and elasticity require detailed knowledge of titin arrangement and interactions in situ.

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Beta-lactam antibiotics are the only clinically approved drugs which directly increase glutamate uptake. They activate the glutamate transporter subtype 1 (GLT-1), the protein responsible for 90% of glutamate uptake in the mammalian brain. The capacity of GLT-1 to clear extracellular glutamate suggests that glutamate transporter activators be explored for therapeutic approaches to clinical conditions caused by increased glutamatergic transmission.

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An accumulating body of evidence indicates that activation of NMDA receptor complexes modulates a number of morphine-induced responses. Because a single injection of morphine increases extracellular glutamate levels and downregulates NMDA receptors, acute morphine appears to increase glutamatergic transmission. On the basis of those data and the fact that morphine and glutamate induce hyperthermia, we investigated whether NMDA receptors modulate the hyperthermic effects of acute morphine in male Sprague-Dawley rats.

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