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Neuroscience

D-Index
47
Citations
14073
World Ranking
6305
National Ranking
2746

Overview

Grahame J. Kidd is affiliated with the Cleveland Clinic in the United States and contributes to fields encompassing Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, with a significant focus on Neuroscience. Their research spans several subfields, notably Molecular Biology, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Neurology, Surfaces, Coatings and Films, and Structural Biology.

Thematic areas in which Grahame J. Kidd's work is concentrated include Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research, Mitochondrial Function and Pathology, Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms, Electron and X-Ray Spectroscopy Techniques, Advanced Electron Microscopy Techniques and Applications, Hereditary Neurological Disorders, and Signaling Pathways in Disease.

Kidd has a record of publications in various scientific journals and venues, frequently contributing to Microscopy and Microanalysis, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), and Microscopy Today. Other publication venues include Progress in Neurobiology and Communications Biology.

Their recent papers include:

  • Ultrastructural view of astrocyte arborization, astrocyte-astrocyte and astrocyte-synapse contacts, intracellular vesicle-like structures, and mitochondrial network, 2022, Progress in Neurobiology
  • The cardiolipin-binding peptide elamipretide mitigates fragmentation of cristae networks following cardiac ischemia reperfusion in rats, 2020, Communications Biology
  • Neuronal hibernation following hippocampal demyelination, 2021, Acta Neuropathologica Communications
  • Ultrastructural view of astrocyte-astrocyte and astrocyte-synapse contacts within the hippocampus, 2020, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • A new mouse model of Charcot-Marie-Tooth 2J neuropathy replicates human axonopathy and suggest alteration in axo-glia communication, 2022, PLoS Genetics

Kidd collaborates regularly with coauthors including Emily Benson, Saame Raza Shaikh, Sydney Aten, Conrad M. Kiyoshi, and Emily P. Arzola. These collaborations reflect interdisciplinary connections and continuing work in their areas of research focus.

Best Publications

  • Control of microglial neurotoxicity by the fractalkine receptor

    Astrid E. Cardona;Erik P. Pioro;Margaret E. Sasse;Volodymyr Kostenko

  • Three or more routes for leukocyte migration into the central nervous system

    Richard M. Ransohoff;Pia Kivisäkk;Grahame Kidd

  • Differential roles of microglia and monocytes in the inflamed central nervous system.

    Ryo Yamasaki;Haiyan Lu;Oleg Butovsky;Nobuhiko Ohno

  • Neurological disability correlates with spinal cord axonal loss and reduced N‐acetyl aspartate in chronic multiple sclerosis patients

    Carl Bjartmar;Grahame Kidd;Sverre Mörk;Richard Rudick

  • Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Microglial Activation and Neuroprotection against Experimental Brain Injury Is Independent of Hematogenous TLR4

    Zhihong Chen;Walid Jalabi;Karl B. Shpargel;Kenneth T. Farabaugh

  • A rapid method for isolation of synaptosomes on Percoll gradients.

    Peter R. Dunkley;Paula E. Jarvie;John W. Heath;Grahame J. Kidd

  • Proteolipid Promoter Activity Distinguishes Two Populations of NG2-Positive Cells throughout Neonatal Cortical Development

    Barbara S. Mallon;H. Elizabeth Shick;Grahame J. Kidd;Wendy B. Macklin

  • Constitutively Active Akt Induces Enhanced Myelination in the CNS

    Ana I. Flores;S. Priyadarshini Narayanan;Emily N. Morse;H. Elizabeth Shick

  • Axonal loss in normal-appearing white matter in a patient with acute MS

    C. Bjartmar;R. P. Kinkel;G. Kidd;R. A. Rudick

  • Evidence for synaptic stripping by cortical microglia

    Bruce D. Trapp;Jerome R. Wujek;Gerson A. Criste;Walid Jalabi

  • Demyelination causes synaptic alterations in hippocampi from multiple sclerosis patients.

    Ranjan Dutta;Ansi Chang;Mary K. Doud;Grahame J. Kidd

  • Microglial displacement of inhibitory synapses provides neuroprotection in the adult brain

    Zhihong Chen;Walid Jalabi;Weiwei Hu;Hyun Joo Park

  • Regional modulation of neurofilament organization by myelination in normal axons.

    Sung Tsang Hsieh;Grahame J. Kidd;Thomas O. Crawford;Zuoshang Xu

  • Rat spinal cord neurons contain nitric oxide synthase

    S. Saito;G. J. Kidd;Bruce D Trapp;T. M. Dawson

  • Modulating CCR2 and CCL2 at the blood-brain barrier: relevance for multiple sclerosis pathogenesis.

    Don Mahad;Melissa K. Callahan;Katherine A. Williams;Eroboghene E. Ubogu

  • Mutational Analysis of a Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein A2 Response Element for RNA Trafficking

    Trent P. Munro;Rebecca J. Magee;Grahame J. Kidd;John H. Carson

  • The adult oligodendrocyte can participate in remyelination

    Ian D Duncan;Abigail B Radcliff;Moones Heidari;Grahame Kidd

  • CORTICAL REMYELINATION: A NEW TARGET FOR REPAIR THERAPIES IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

    Ansi Chang;Susan M. Staugaitis;Susan M. Staugaitis;Ranjan Dutta;Courtney E. Batt

  • Genetic deletion of BACE1 in mice affects remyelination of sciatic nerves

    Xiangyou Hu;Wanxia He;Claudiu Diaconu;Xiaoying Tang

  • Myelination and Axonal Electrical Activity Modulate the Distribution and Motility of Mitochondria at CNS Nodes of Ranvier

    Nobuhiko Ohno;Grahame J. Kidd;Don Mahad;Sumiko Kiryu-Seo

  • Demyelination Increases Axonal Stationary Mitochondrial Size and the Speed of Axonal Mitochondrial Transport

    Sumiko Kiryu-Seo;Nobuhiko Ohno;Grahame J. Kidd;Hitoshi Komuro

Frequent Co-Authors

Richard M. Ransohoff
Richard M. Ransohoff Harvard University
Arthur H. Heuer
Arthur H. Heuer Case Western Reserve University
Gregory A. Elder
Gregory A. Elder Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Jean de Vellis
Jean de Vellis University of California, Los Angeles
Javier DeFelipe
Javier DeFelipe Technical University of Madrid
Patrick R. Hof
Patrick R. Hof Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Klaus-Armin Nave
Klaus-Armin Nave Max Planck Society
Tibor Harkany
Tibor Harkany Medical University of Vienna
Patrizia Casaccia
Patrizia Casaccia City University of New York
Andres Buonanno
Andres Buonanno National Institutes of Health

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