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Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
69
Citations
15468
World Ranking
7470
National Ranking
580

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2010 - Fellow of the Royal Society, United Kingdom

Overview

Roger C. Hardie is affiliated with the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily spans the fields of Neuroscience and Biochemistry, Genetics, and Molecular Biology, with a focus on several intersecting subfields.

The main subfields of their work include Molecular Biology, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, with additional contributions to Plant Science, Endocrine and Autonomic Systems, and Cognitive Neuroscience. Their research covers various topics such as Neurobiology and Insect Physiology, Circadian rhythm and melatonin regulation, Photoreceptor and optogenetics research, Visual perception and processing mechanisms, Animal Behavior and Reproduction, Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance, as well as Insect Resistance and Genetics.

They have published research in a range of scientific venues including:

  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Journal of Neuroscience
  • Current Biology
  • Structure
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Recent papers authored or coauthored by Roger C. Hardie include:

  • Binocular mirror-symmetric microsaccadic sampling enables Drosophila hyperacute 3D vision, 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Rapid Release of Ca2+ from Endoplasmic Reticulum Mediated by Na+/Ca2+ Exchange, 2020, Journal of Neuroscience
  • Light Sampling via Throttled Visual Phototransduction Robustly Synchronizes the Drosophila Circadian Clock, 2020, Current Biology
  • Calmodulin binds to Drosophila TRP with an unexpected mode, 2020, Structure
  • Less is more: Light sampling via throttled visual phototransduction robustly synchronizes the Drosophila circadian clock in the absence of Cryptochrome, 2020, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Frequent collaborators in their work include Zhuoyi Song, Mikko Juusola, Zijing Chen, Craig Montell, and Maite Ogueta.

In recognition of professional achievements, Roger C. Hardie was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in the United Kingdom in 2010.

Best Publications

  • The trp gene is essential for a light-activated Ca2+ channel in Drosophila photoreceptors

    Roger C. Hardie;Baruch Minke

  • Visual transduction in Drosophila

    Roger C. Hardie;Padinjat Raghu

  • Phototransduction Motifs and Variations

    King Wai Yau;Roger C. Hardie

  • Polyunsaturated fatty acids activate the Drosophila light-sensitive channels TRP and TRPL

    Sylwester Chyb;Padinjat Raghu;Roger C. Hardie

  • A histamine-activated chloride channel involved in neurotransmission at a photoreceptor synapse.

    Hardie Rc

  • Common strategies for light adaptation in the peripheral visual systems of fly and dragonfly

    Simon B. Laughlin;Roger C. Hardie

  • Is histamine a neurotransmitter in insect photoreceptors

    R. C. Hardie

  • Novel Ca2+ channels underlying transduction in Drosophila photoreceptors: implications for phosphoinositide-mediated Ca2+ mobilization.

    R.C. Hardie;B. Minke

  • Phototransduction and the evolution of photoreceptors.

    Gordon L. Fain;Roger Hardie;Simon B. Laughlin

  • Regulation of TRP channels via lipid second messengers.

    Roger C. Hardie

  • Electrophysiological analysis of fly retina. I: Comparative properties of R1-6 and R 7 and 8

    Roger C. Hardie

  • Whole-cell recordings of the light induced current in dissociated Drosophila photoreceptors: evidence for feedback by calcium permeating the light-sensitive channels

    Roger C. Hardie

  • In Vivo Analysis of the Drosophila Light-Sensitive Channels, TRP and TRPL

    Helmut Reuss;Mart H. Mojet;Sylwester Chyb;Roger C. Hardie

  • The photoreceptor array of the dipteran retina

    Roger C. Hardie

  • TRP channels and lipids: from Drosophila to mammalian physiology

    Roger C. Hardie

  • Calcium influx via TRP channels is required to maintain PIP2 levels in Drosophila photoreceptors.

    Roger C Hardie;Padinjat Raghu;Suzanna Moore;Mikko Juusola

  • Photomechanical Responses in Drosophila Photoreceptors

    Roger C. Hardie;Kristian Franze

  • Single photon responses in Drosophila photoreceptors and their regulation by Ca2

    Stephen R. Henderson;Helmut Reuss;Roger C. Hardie

  • Phototransduction in Drosophila melanogaster.

    Roger C. Hardie

  • Constitutive Activity of the Light-Sensitive Channels TRP and TRPL in the Drosophila Diacylglycerol Kinase Mutant, rdgA

    Padinjat Raghu;Kate Usher;Sarah Jonas;Sylwester Chyb

Frequent Co-Authors

Mikko Juusola
Mikko Juusola University of Sheffield
Simon B. Laughlin
Simon B. Laughlin University of Cambridge
Baruch Minke
Baruch Minke Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Craig Montell
Craig Montell University of California, Santa Barbara
Stephen A. Billings
Stephen A. Billings University of Sheffield
Mingjie Zhang
Mingjie Zhang Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Zvi Selinger
Zvi Selinger Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Wei Liu
Wei Liu Medical College of Wisconsin
Neil S. Millar
Neil S. Millar University College London
Erik De Schutter
Erik De Schutter Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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