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Neuroscience

D-Index
39
Citations
4740
World Ranking
8398
National Ranking
34

Overview

Árpád Dobolyi is affiliated with Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary and works primarily in the field of Neuroscience. Their research spans multiple subfields, including Social Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Molecular Biology, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, and Endocrine and Autonomic Systems.

The main topics of Árpád Dobolyi's work encompass neuroendocrine regulation and behavior, stress responses and cortisol, sleep and wakefulness research, neural dynamics and brain function, neuroscience and neuropharmacology research, hypothalamic control of reproductive hormones, and mitochondrial function and pathology.

Dobolyi has contributed to several recent papers, which include:

  • Secretion and Function of Pituitary Prolactin in Evolutionary Perspective (2020) published in Frontiers in Neuroscience
  • Exclusive neuronal detection of KGDHC-specific subunits in the adult human brain cortex despite pancellular protein lysine succinylation (2020) published in Brain Structure and Function

Frequent co-authors working alongside Dobolyi comprise:

  • Fanni Dóra
  • David W. Keller
  • Miklós Palkovits
  • Melinda Cservenák
  • Vivien Csikós

Árpád Dobolyi's work has appeared in several notable publication venues, with multiple papers published in:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • International Journal of Molecular Sciences
  • iScience
  • Frontiers in Neuroscience
  • Brain Structure and Function

In addition to articles, Dobolyi has contributed to book publications, including a title published by Springer International Publishing: Neuroanatomy of Neuroendocrine Systems (2021).

Best Publications

  • The neuroprotective functions of transforming growth factor beta proteins.

    Arpád Dobolyi;Csilla Vincze;Csilla Vincze;Gabriella Pál;Gabriella Pál;Gábor Lovas

  • Exercise and probiotics attenuate the development of Alzheimer's disease in transgenic mice: Role of microbiome

    Dora Abraham;Janos Feher;Gian Luca Scuderi;Dora Szabo

  • Astrocytes convert network excitation to tonic inhibition of neurons.

    László Héja;Gabriella Nyitrai;Orsolya Kékesi;Árpád Dobolyi

  • Glutamate Uptake Triggers Transporter-Mediated GABA Release from Astrocytes

    László Héja;Péter Barabás;Gabriella Nyitrai;Katalin A. Kékesi

  • Uridine Function in the Central Nervous System

    Arpád Dobolyi;Gábor Juhász;Zsolt Kovács;Julianna Kardos

  • Calcitonin gene‐related peptide‐containing pathways in the rat forebrain

    Arpád Dobolyi;Sarah Irwin;Gábor Makara;Ted Björn Usdin

  • Central amylin expression and its induction in rat dams

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  • Anatomical and physiological evidence for involvement of tuberoinfundibular peptide of 39 residues in nociception

    Arpad Dobolyi;Hiroshi Ueda;Hitoshi Uchida;Miklós Palkovits

  • A secretagogin locus of the mammalian hypothalamus controls stress hormone release

    Roman A. Romanov;Alán Alpár;Ming-Dong Zhang;Amit Zeisel

  • Extensive astrocyte synchronization advances neuronal coupling in slow wave activity in vivo

    Zsolt Szabó;László Héja;Gergely Szalay;Orsolya Kékesi

  • Synaptic mitochondria: A brain mitochondria cluster with a specific proteome

    Katalin Völgyi;Péter Gulyássy;Krisztina Háden;Viktor Kis

  • Parathyroid hormone 2 receptor and its endogenous ligand tuberoinfundibular peptide of 39 residues are concentrated in endocrine, viscerosensory and auditory brain regions in macaque and human.

    Attila G. Bagó;Eugene Dimitrov;Richard Saunders;László Seress

  • Preoptic Inputs and Mechanisms that Regulate Maternal Responsiveness

    Árpád Dobolyi;Árpád Dobolyi;D. R. Grattan;D. S. Stolzenberg

  • Expression and distribution of tuberoinfundibular peptide of 39 residues in the rat central nervous system

    Arpad Dobolyi;Miklós Palkovits;Ted Björn Usdin

  • The TIP39-PTH2 receptor system: unique peptidergic cell groups in the brainstem and their interactions with central regulatory mechanisms.

    Arpád Dobolyi;Miklós Palkovits;Ted B. Usdin

  • Tuberoinfundibular Peptide of 39 Residues Is Activated during Lactation and Participates in the Suckling-Induced Prolactin Release in Rat

    Melinda Cservenák;Ibolya Bodnár;Ted B. Usdin;Miklós Palkovits

  • Thalamic neuropeptide mediating the effects of nursing on lactation and maternal motivation.

    Melinda Cservenák;Melinda Cservenák;Éva R. Szabó;Éva R. Szabó;Ibolya Bodnár;András Lékó

  • Distribution of mRNAs encoding transforming growth factors‐β1, ‐2, and ‐3 in the intact rat brain and after experimentally induced focal ischemia

    Csilla Vincze;Csilla Vincze;Gabriella Pál;Edina A. Wappler;Éva R. Szabó

  • Analysis of purine and pyrimidine bases, nucleosides and deoxynucleosides in brain microsamples (microdialysates and micropunches) and cerebrospinal fluid

    A Dobolyi;A Reichart;T Szikra;N Szilágyi

  • Receptors of Peptides as Therapeutic Targets in Epilepsy Research

    A. Dobolyi;K.A. Kekesi;G. Juhasz;A.D. Szekely

  • Neurons containing tuberoinfundibular peptide of 39 residues project to limbic, endocrine, auditory and spinal areas in rat.

    A Dobolyi;M Palkovits;I Bodnár;T.B Usdin

  • Amylin is a novel neuropeptide with potential maternal functions in the rat

    Éva Rebeka Szabó;Melinda Cservenák;Arpád Dobolyi

  • A Thalamo-Hypothalamic Pathway That Activates Oxytocin Neurons in Social Contexts in Female Rats.

    Melinda Cservenák;Dávid Keller;Viktor Kis;Viktor Kis;Emese A Fazekas;Emese A Fazekas

Frequent Co-Authors

Miklós Palkovits
Miklós Palkovits Semmelweis University
Ted B. Usdin
Ted B. Usdin National Institutes of Health
Thomas A. Lutz
Thomas A. Lutz University of Zurich
Tibor Harkany
Tibor Harkany Medical University of Vienna
László Seress
László Seress University of Pecs
Zsolt Liposits
Zsolt Liposits Institute of Experimental Medicine
István Ulbert
István Ulbert Pázmány Péter Catholic University
Erik Hrabovszky
Erik Hrabovszky Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Mathias Uhlén
Mathias Uhlén Royal Institute of Technology
Richard J. Rodenburg
Richard J. Rodenburg Radboud University

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