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Neuroscience

D-Index
61
Citations
12260
World Ranking
3701
National Ranking
321

Overview

Rüdiger W. Veh is affiliated with Charité - University Medicine Berlin in Germany. Their research primarily focuses on biochemical and molecular biological mechanisms, particularly within the realm of polyamine metabolism and its neurological implications.

The scientist has contributed extensively to the field of Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology with a total of 27 publications. Their work spans several subfields, including Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Neurology, and Pharmacology.

Key topics within their research portfolio include:

  • Polyamine Metabolism and Applications
  • Amino Acid Enzymes and Metabolism
  • Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research
  • Autoimmune Neurological Disorders and Treatments
  • Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research
  • Neuroscience of Respiration and Sleep
  • DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry

Rüdiger W. Veh has published frequently in journals such as Biomolecules, Preprints.org, Molecular Psychiatry, Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, and Amino Acids. Biomolecules stands out as the primary publication venue, with five papers featured there.

Among recent publications are:

  • "Critical Role of Astrocytic Polyamine and GABA Metabolism in Epileptogenesis," 2022, Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
  • "The involvement of polyamine uptake and synthesis pathways in the proliferation of neonatal astrocytes," 2020, Amino Acids
  • "Unique Chemistry, Intake, and Metabolism of Polyamines in the Central Nervous System (CNS) and Its Body," 2022, Biomolecules
  • "Uptake of Biotinylated Spermine in Astrocytes: Effect of Cx43 siRNA, HIV-Tat Protein and Polyamine Transport Inhibitor on Polyamine Uptake," 2021, Biomolecules
  • "As Verified with the Aid of Biotinylated Spermine, the Brain Cannot Take up Polyamines from the Bloodstream Leaving It Solely Dependent on Local Biosynthesis," 2023, Biomolecules

The scientist often collaborates with other researchers. Frequent co-authors include Serguei N. Skatchkov, Misty J. Eaton, Julian Rieck, Christian J. Malpica-Nieves, and Christian Derst.

Best Publications

  • An unconventional role for miRNA: let-7 activates Toll-like receptor 7 and causes neurodegeneration

    Sabrina M Lehmann;Christina Krüger;Boyoun Park;Katja Derkow

  • Glutamatergic Afferents of the Ventral Tegmental Area in the Rat

    Stefanie Geisler;Christian Derst;Rüdiger W. Veh;Daniel S. Zahm

  • SAP102, a Novel Postsynaptic Protein That Interacts with NMDA Receptor Complexes In Vivo

    Bettina M. Müller;Ute Kistner;Ute Kistner;Stefan Kindler;Stefan Kindler;Wook Joon Chung

  • SAP90, a rat presynaptic protein related to the product of the Drosophila tumor suppressor gene dlg-A.

    U Kistner;B M Wenzel;R W Veh;C Cases-Langhoff

  • Immunohistochemical Localization of Five Members of the KV1 Channel Subunits: Contrasting Subcellular Locations and Neuron‐specific Co‐localizations in Rat Brain

    Rüdiger W. Veh;Ralf Lichtinghagen;Sabine Sewing;Frank Wunder

  • Molecular characterization and spatial distribution of SAP97, a novel presynaptic protein homologous to SAP90 and the Drosophila discs-large tumor suppressor protein

    BM Muller;U Kistner;RW Veh;C Cases-Langhoff

  • Amphiphysin, a novel protein associated with synaptic vesicles.

    B Lichte;R W Veh;H E Meyer;M W Kilimann

  • Heteromerization of Kir2.x Potassium Channels Contributes to the Phenotype of Andersen's Syndrome

    Regina Preisig-Müller;Günter Schlichthörl;Tobias Goerge;Steffen Heinen

  • Subnuclear organization of the rat habenular complexes.

    Andres Kh;von Düring M;Veh Rw

  • Kir potassium channel subunit expression in retinal glial cells: implications for spatial potassium buffering.

    Paulo Kofuji;Bernd Biedermann;Venkatraman Siddharthan;Maik Raap

  • Glutamatergic axons from the lateral habenula mainly terminate on GABAergic neurons of the ventral midbrain

    Unknown

  • Ultrastructural localization of Shaker-related potassium channel subunits and synapse-associated protein 90 to septate-like junctions in rat cerebellar Pinceaux

    Gregor Laube;Jochen Röper;J. Christian Pitt;Sabine Sewing

  • Comparison of cloned Kir2 channels with native inward rectifier K+ channels from guinea-pig cardiomyocytes.

    Gong Xin Liu;Christian Derst;Günter Schlichthörl;Steffen Heinen

  • Agmatinase, an inactivator of the putative endogenous antidepressant agmatine, is strongly upregulated in hippocampal interneurons of subjects with mood disorders

    Hans-Gert Bernstein;Claudia Stich;Kristin Jäger;Henrik Dobrowolny

  • Neuronal Inwardly Rectifying K+ Channels Differentially Couple to PDZ Proteins of the PSD-95/SAP90 Family

    Ralf B. Nehring;Erhard Wischmeyer;Frank Döring;Rüdiger W. Veh

  • Pore-forming subunits of K-ATP channels, Kir6.1 and Kir6.2, display prominent differences in regional and cellular distribution in the rat brain.

    Achim Thomzig;Gregor Laube;Harald Prüss;Rüdiger W. Veh

  • Reduced anxiety-related behaviour in transgenic mice overexpressing serotonin1A receptors

    Heike Kusserow;Benjamin Davies;Heide Hörtnagl;Ingo Voigt

  • Expression of Toll-like receptors in the developing brain.

    David Kaul;Piet Habbel;Katja Derkow;Christina Krüger

  • Expression of Kv1 Potassium Channels in Mouse Hippocampal Primary Cultures: Development and Activity-Dependent Regulation

    Gisela Grosse;Andreas Draguhn;Lysann Höhne;Rosemarie Tapp

  • Morphologic and cytochemical criteria for the identification and delineation of individual subnuclei within the lateral habenular complex of the rat.

    Stefanie Geisler;Karl Hermann Andres;Rüdiger W. Veh

  • Toxicity of amorphous silica nanoparticles on eukaryotic cell model is determined by particle agglomeration and serum protein adsorption effects

    Daniela Drescher;Daniela Drescher;Guillermo Orts-Gil;Gregor Laube;Kishore Natte

  • Kir6.1 is the principal pore-forming subunit of astrocyte but not neuronal plasma membrane K-ATP channels

    Achim Thomzig;Mareike Wenzel;Christine Karschin;Misty J. Eaton

Frequent Co-Authors

Thomas Pannicke
Thomas Pannicke Leipzig University
Hans-Gert Bernstein
Hans-Gert Bernstein Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg
Daniel S. Zahm
Daniel S. Zahm Saint Louis University
Robert Nitsch
Robert Nitsch University of Münster
Uwe Heinemann
Uwe Heinemann Charité - University Medicine Berlin
Janina Kneipp
Janina Kneipp Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Imre Vida
Imre Vida Charité - University Medicine Berlin
John R. Huguenard
John R. Huguenard Stanford University
Paul S. Buckmaster
Paul S. Buckmaster Stanford University
Karen Gertz
Karen Gertz Charité - University Medicine Berlin

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