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D-Index
65
Citations
11204
World Ranking
3192
National Ranking
274

Overview

Marlies Knipper is affiliated with the University of Tübingen in Germany and conducts research primarily in the field of Neuroscience. Their work focuses on sensory systems, cognitive neuroscience, neurology, cellular and molecular neuroscience, and speech and hearing. The main research topics covered by Marlies Knipper include hearing, cochlea, tinnitus, genetics, hearing loss and rehabilitation, vestibular and auditory disorders, neural dynamics and brain function, noise effects and management, as well as neuroscience and neuropharmacology research and music perception.

Frequent collaborators in Marlies Knipper's research include Lukas Rüttiger, Stephan Wolpert, Wibke Singer, Christoph Braun, and Matthias H. Munk. These coauthors have contributed extensively, with collaboration counts ranging from 11 to 26 joint works.

Their research has been published in various scientific venues, among which the most frequent include:

  • Laryngo-Rhino-Otologie
  • Frontiers in Neuroscience
  • Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
  • Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
  • International Journal of Molecular Sciences

Some notable recent papers authored or coauthored by Marlies Knipper include:

  • The Neural Bases of Tinnitus: Lessons from Deafness and Cochlear Implants, 2020, Journal of Neuroscience
  • Disturbed Balance of Inhibitory Signaling Links Hearing Loss and Cognition, 2022, Frontiers in Neural Circuits

Additional selected recent papers relevant to the broader research context surrounding Knipper's work are:

  • Age-related hearing loss pertaining to potassium ion channels in the cochlea and auditory pathway, 2020, Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology
  • Functional biomarkers that distinguish between tinnitus with and without hyperacusis, 2021, Clinical and Translational Medicine
  • Co-occurrence of Hyperacusis Accelerates With Tinnitus Burden Over Time and Requires Medical Care, 2021, Frontiers in Neurology

Best Publications

  • Positive feedback between acetylcholine and the neurotrophins nerve growth factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the rat hippocampus.

    Marlies Knipper;Maria da Penha Berzaghi;Andrea Blöchl;Heinz Breer

  • Advances in the neurobiology of hearing disorders: recent developments regarding the basis of tinnitus and hyperacusis

    Marlies Knipper;Pim Van Dijk;Isidro Nunes;Lukas Rüttiger

  • A splice site mutation in the murine Opa1 gene features pathology of autosomal dominant optic atrophy.

    Marcel V Alavi;Stefanie Bette;Simone Schimpf;Frank Schuettauf

  • Deletion of the Ca2+-activated potassium (BK) α-subunit but not the BKβ1-subunit leads to progressive hearing loss

    Lukas Rüttiger;Matthias Sausbier;Ulrike Zimmermann;Harald Winter

  • Protein kinase CK2 is coassembled with small conductance Ca(2+)-activated K+ channels and regulates channel gating.

    Wolfgang Bildl;Tim Strassmaier;Henrike Thurm;Jens Andersen

  • Functional significance of channels and transporters expressed in the inner ear and kidney

    Florian Lang;Volker Vallon;Marlies Knipper;Philine Wangemann

  • Nuclear Localization of Ataxin-3 Is Required for the Manifestation of Symptoms in SCA3: In Vivo Evidence

    Ulrike Bichelmeier;Thorsten Schmidt;Jeannette Hübener;Jana Boy

  • Thyroid Hormone Deficiency Before the Onset of Hearing Causes Irreversible Damage to Peripheral and Central Auditory Systems

    Marlies Knipper;Christoph Zinn;Hannes Maier;Mark Praetorius

  • The DFNB31 gene product whirlin connects to the Usher protein network in the cochlea and retina by direct association with USH2A and VLGR1

    Erwin van Wijk;Bert van der Zwaag;Theo Peters;Ulrike Zimmermann

  • Scaffold protein harmonin (USH1C) provides molecular links between Usher syndrome type 1 and type 2

    Jan Reiners;Erwin van Wijk;Tina Märker;Ulrike Zimmermann

  • Resting potential and submembrane calcium concentration of inner hair cells in the isolated mouse cochlea are set by KCNQ-type potassium channels.

    Dominik Oliver;Marlies Knipper;Christian Derst;Bernd Fakler

  • Developmental Regulation of Nicotinic Synapses on Cochlear Inner Hair Cells

    Eleonora Katz;Ana Belén Elgoyhen;María E. Gómez-Casati;Marlies Knipper

  • Position-dependent patterning of spontaneous action potentials in immature cochlear inner hair cells

    Stuart L Johnson;Tobias Eckrich;Stephanie Kuhn;Valeria Zampini;Valeria Zampini

  • The Reduced Cochlear Output and the Failure to Adapt the Central Auditory Response Causes Tinnitus in Noise Exposed Rats

    Lukas Rüttiger;Wibke Singer;Rama Panford-Walsh;Masahiro Matsumoto

  • Thyroid hormone is a critical determinant for the regulation of the cochlear motor protein prestin.

    Thomas Weber;Ulrike Zimmermann;Harald Winter;Andreas Mack

  • A behavioral paradigm to judge acute sodium salicylate-induced sound experience in rats: a new approach for an animal model on tinnitus.

    Lukas Rüttiger;Jürgen Ciuffani;Hans Peter Zenner;Marlies Knipper

  • Lack of Bdnf and TrkB signalling in the postnatal cochlea leads to a spatial reshaping of innervation along the tonotopic axis and hearing loss.

    Thomas Schimmang;Justin Tan;Marcus Müller;Ulrike Zimmermann

  • Thyroid hormone affects Schwann cell and oligodendrocyte gene expression at the glial transition zone of the VIIIth nerve prior to cochlea function

    Marlies Knipper;Christine Bandtlow;Lika Gestwa;Iris Köpschall

  • Two classes of outer hair cells along the tonotopic axis of the cochlea.

    J Engel;C Braig;L Rüttiger;S Kuhn

  • Elementary properties of CaV1.3 Ca2+ channels expressed in mouse cochlear inner hair cells

    Valeria Zampini;Valeria Zampini;Stuart L. Johnson;Christoph Franz;Neil D. Lawrence

  • Insights from the third international conference on hyperacusis: causes, evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment

    Hashir Aazh;Marlies Knipper;Ali A. Danesh;Andrea E. Cavanna

Frequent Co-Authors

Lukas Rüttiger
Lukas Rüttiger University of Tübingen
Walter Marcotti
Walter Marcotti University of Sheffield
Eckhard Friauf
Eckhard Friauf Technical University of Kaiserslautern
Christoph Braun
Christoph Braun University of Tübingen
David N. Furness
David N. Furness Keele University
Bernd Wissinger
Bernd Wissinger University of Tübingen
Robert D. Frisina
Robert D. Frisina University of South Florida
Ronald Roepman
Ronald Roepman Radboud University
Karen P. Steel
Karen P. Steel King's College London
Olaf Riess
Olaf Riess University of Tübingen

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