Publications by authors named "S P Barrow"

Article Synopsis
  • Neurons release neurotransmitters like glutamate before establishing connections, but the specific impact of this release on synapse formation is not well understood.
  • Research indicates that synapses in the cortex don’t necessarily need this neurotransmitter release for formation, yet glutamate influences receptor movement and stimulates spine development in neurons.
  • The study reveals that glutamate can decrease synapse density in young cortical neurons in a calcium-dependent manner, but this effect is mitigated by the adhesion molecules NL1 and neurexin 1, highlighting the complex interplay between glutamate, neurotransmitter release, and synaptic stability.
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Murine adenosine deaminase (mADA) is a prototypic system for studying the thermal activation of active site chemistry within the TIM barrel family of enzyme reactions. Previous temperature-dependent hydrogen deuterium exchange studies under various conditions have identified interconnected thermal networks for heat transfer from opposing protein-solvent interfaces to active site residues in mADA. One of these interfaces contains a solvent exposed helix-loop-helix moiety that presents the hydrophobic face of its long α-helix to the backside of bound substrate.

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Objective This study aims to investigate breast cancer lymph node involvement in a West Indian population while correlating it with various histological parameters and evaluating the role of the sentinel lymph node biopsy. Method This is a retrospective study where histology reports for all breast cancer-related biopsies from 2018 to 2021, totaling 813 samples, were obtained. Histological parameters from these reports were extracted into a spreadsheet and analyzed using Statistical Product and Service Solutions (SPSS, version 28.

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This is the first study to assess longitudinal changes in anthropometric, physiological, and physical qualities of international women's rugby league players. Thirteen forwards and 11 backs were tested three times over a 10-month period. Assessments included: standing height and body mass, body composition measured by dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), a blood panel, resting metabolic rate (RMR) assessed by indirect calorimetry, aerobic capacity (i.

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Although neurons release neurotransmitter before contact, the role for this release in synapse formation remains unclear. Cortical synapses do not require synaptic vesicle release for formation , yet glutamate clearly regulates glutamate receptor trafficking and induces spine formation . Using a culture system to dissect molecular mechanisms, we found that glutamate rapidly decreases synapse density specifically in young cortical neurons in a local and calcium-dependent manner through decreasing NMDAR transport and surface expression as well as co-transport with neuroligin (NL1).

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