2 results match your criteria: "and Center for Medical Life Science of Waseda University Shinjuku-ku[Affiliation]"
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
August 2012
Laboratory of Integrative Brain Sciences, Department of Biology, Waseda University, and Center for Medical Life Science of Waseda University Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
The brain has traditionally been considered to be a target site of peripheral steroid hormones. In addition to this classical concept, we now know that the brain has the capacity to synthesize steroids de novo from cholesterol, the so-called "neurosteroids." In the middle 1990s, the Purkinje cell, an important cerebellar neuron, was identified as a major site for neurosteroid formation in the brain of mammals and other vertebrates.
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August 2012
Laboratory of Integrative Brain Sciences, Department of Biology, Waseda University, and Center for Medical Life Science of Waseda University Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
It is now established that the brain and other nervous systems have the capability of forming steroids de novo, the so-called "neurosteroids." The pioneering discovery of Baulieu and his colleagues, using rodents, has opened the door to a new research field of "neurosteroids." In contrast to mammalian vertebrates, little has been known regarding de novo neurosteroidogenesis in the brain of birds.
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