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D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
53
Citations
10162
World Ranking
5110
National Ranking
2286

Overview

John E. Rash is affiliated with Colorado State University in the United States. Their academic profile reflects involvement in research supported by this primary institution, though specific details about their areas of research specialization or detailed publication records are not provided.

Details such as recent published papers, frequent co-authors, and common publication venues for John E. Rash are not available, indicating either incomplete data or limited public record of such activities.

There is no information about book publications by this researcher, which suggests that their scholarly output may primarily consist of journal articles or other forms of academic communication not cataloged in the current source.

No specific main fields of study, subfields, or primary topics associated with John E. Rash are listed. Consequently, it is not possible to outline their exact research interests or thematic focus within the broader academic landscape.

There are no awards documented for John E. Rash, indicating no publicly recorded recognition or it may reflect partial data coverage.

Based on the available information, John E. Rash is an active researcher, as there is no indication of their being deceased.

Best Publications

  • Direct immunogold labeling of aquaporin-4 in square arrays of astrocyte and ependymocyte plasma membranes in rat brain and spinal cord

    J E Rash;T Yasumura;C S Hudson;P Agre

  • Cell-specific expression of connexins and evidence of restricted gap junctional coupling between glial cells and between neurons.

    John E. Rash;Thomas Yasumura;F. Edward Dudek;James I. Nagy

  • Connexins and gap junctions of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes in the CNS

    James I Nagy;John E Rash

  • Update on connexins and gap junctions in neurons and glia in the mammalian nervous system.

    James I. Nagy;F.Edward Dudek;John E. Rash

  • Immunogold evidence that neuronal gap junctions in adult rat brain and spinal cord contain connexin-36 but not connexin-32 or connexin-43

    J. E. Rash;W. A. Staines;T. Yasumura;D. Patel

  • Studies of excitable membranes. II. A comparison of specializations at neuromuscular junctions and nonjunctional sarcolemmas of mammalian fast and slow twitch muscle fibers.

    M H Ellisman;J E Rash;L A Staehelin;K R Porter

  • Development of acetylcholine sensitivity during myogenesis.

    Douglas Fambrough;John E. Rash

  • STUDIES OF EXCITABLE MEMBRANES: I. Macromolecular Specializations of the Neuromuscular Junction and the Nonjunctional Sarcolemma

    John E. Rash;Mark H. Ellisman

  • Identification of cells expressing Cx43, Cx30, Cx26, Cx32 and Cx36 in gap junctions of rat brain and spinal cord.

    J. E. Rash;T. Yasumura;K. G. V. Davidson;C. S. Furman

  • Grid‐mapped freeze‐fracture analysis of gap junctions in gray and white matter of adult rat central nervous system, with evidence for a “panglial syncytium” that is not coupled to neurons

    John E. Rash;Heather S. Duffy;F. Edward Dudek;Brent L. Bilhartz

  • Connexin26 in adult rodent central nervous system: Demonstration at astrocytic gap junctions and colocalization with connexin30 and connexin43

    James I. Nagy;Xinbo Li;Jeremy Rempel;Gerald Stelmack

  • CONNEXIN-47 AND CONNEXIN-32 IN GAP JUNCTIONS OF OLIGODENDROCYTE SOMATA, MYELIN SHEATHS, PARANODAL LOOPS AND SCHMIDT-LANTERMAN INCISURES: IMPLICATIONS FOR IONIC HOMEOSTASIS AND POTASSIUM SIPHONING

    N. Kamasawa;A. Sik;M. Morita;T. Yasumura

  • Coupling of Astrocyte Connexins Cx26, Cx30, Cx43 to Oligodendrocyte Cx29, Cx32, Cx47: Implications From Normal and Connexin32 Knockout Mice

    J.I. Nagy;A.-V. Ionescu;B.D. Lynn;J.E. Rash

  • Molecular Disruptions of the Panglial Syncytium Block Potassium Siphoning and Axonal Saltatory Conduction: Pertinence to Neuromyelitis Optica and other Demyelinating Diseases of the Central Nervous System

    John E. Rash

  • Gap junction-mediated electrical transmission: regulatory mechanisms and plasticity

    Alberto E. Pereda;Sebastian Curti;Gregory Hoge;Roger Cachope

  • Temporary loss of perivascular aquaporin-4 in neocortex after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in mice

    Didrik S. Frydenlund;Anish Bhardwaj;Takashi Otsuka;Maria N. Mylonakou

  • ‘NON-SYNAPTIC’ MECHANISMS IN SEIZURES AND EPILEPTOGENESIS

    F. Edward Dudek;Thomas Yasumura;John E. Rash

  • Neuronal connexin36 association with zonula occludens-1 protein (ZO-1) in mouse brain and interaction with the first PDZ domain of ZO-1

    Xinbo Li;Carl Olson;Shijun Lu;Naomi Kamasawa

  • Ultrastructural and electrophysiological correlates of cell coupling and cytoplasmic fusion during myogenesis in vitro.

    John E. Rash;Douglas Fambrough

  • Oligodendrocytes control potassium accumulation in white matter and seizure susceptibility

    Valerie A Larson;Yevgeniya Mironova;Kimberly G Vanderpool;Ari Waisman

  • Dynamics of electrical transmission at club endings on the Mauthner cells.

    Alberto E. Pereda;John E. Rash;James I. Nagy;Michael V.L. Bennett

Frequent Co-Authors

James I. Nagy
James I. Nagy University of Manitoba
F. Edward Dudek
F. Edward Dudek University of Utah
Michael V. L. Bennett
Michael V. L. Bennett Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Ole Petter Ottersen
Ole Petter Ottersen University of Oslo
Dwight E. Bergles
Dwight E. Bergles Johns Hopkins University
Susan L. Wearne
Susan L. Wearne Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
William G.M. Janssen
William G.M. Janssen Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Patrick R. Hof
Patrick R. Hof Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Attila Sik
Attila Sik University of Birmingham
Roger D. Traub
Roger D. Traub IBM (United States)

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