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Neuroscience

D-Index
87
Citations
31869
World Ranking
1248
National Ranking
636

Overview

Wade G. Regehr is affiliated with Harvard Medical School in the United States and has focused their research primarily in the field of Neuroscience. Their work spans several subfields including Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Neurology, Sensory Systems, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Molecular Biology.

Their research covers a range of topics with significant contributions to the study of vestibular and auditory disorders, neuroscience and neuropharmacology research, hearing, cochlea, tinnitus, genetics, neural dynamics and brain function, neuroscience of respiration and sleep, cellular transport and secretion, as well as photoreceptor and optogenetics research.

Regehr has published extensively, with recent notable papers including:

  • A transcriptomic atlas of mouse cerebellar cortex comprehensively defines cell types (2021, Nature)
  • Meissner corpuscles and their spatially intermingled afferents underlie gentle touch perception (2020, Science)
  • The Cerebellar Cortex (2022, Annual Review of Neuroscience)
  • Structured cerebellar connectivity supports resilient pattern separation (2022, Nature)
  • Cerebellum-Specific Deletion of the GABAA Receptor δ Subunit Leads to Sex-Specific Disruption of Behavior (2020, Cell Reports)

The venues in which Regehr has frequently published include:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • eLife
  • Nature
  • Cell Reports
  • Nature Neuroscience

Frequent collaborators in their research efforts are:

  • Christopher H. Chen
  • Evan Z. Macosko
  • Chong Guo
  • Wei-Chung Allen Lee
  • Tomás Osorno

Best Publications

  • Short-Term Synaptic Plasticity

    Robert S. Zucker;Wade G. Regehr

  • Synaptic computation

    Unknown

  • Retrograde Inhibition of Presynaptic Calcium Influx by Endogenous Cannabinoids at Excitatory Synapses onto Purkinje Cells

    Anatol C Kreitzer;Wade G Regehr

  • Autistic-like behaviour and cerebellar dysfunction in Purkinje cell Tsc1 mutant mice

    Peter Tzu-shin Tsai;Court Hull;Yunxiang Chu;Emily Greene-Colozzi

  • Interplay between facilitation, depression, and residual calcium at three presynaptic terminals.

    Jeremy S. Dittman;Anatol C. Kreitzer;Wade G. Regehr

  • Calcium control of transmitter release at a cerebellar synapse

    I.M. Mintz;B.L. Sabatini;W.G. Regehr

  • Determinants of the Time Course of Facilitation at the Granule Cell to Purkinje Cell Synapse

    Pradeep P. Atluri;Wade G. Regehr

  • Short-Term Presynaptic Plasticity

    Wade G. Regehr

  • Timing of neurotransmission at fast synapses in the mammalian brain.

    Bernardo L. Sabatini;Wade G. Regehr

  • The Mechanisms and Functions of Synaptic Facilitation.

    Skyler L. Jackman;Wade G. Regehr

  • Developmental remodeling of the retinogeniculate synapse.

    Chinfei Chen;Wade G. Regehr

  • Molecular mechanisms for synchronous, asynchronous, and spontaneous neurotransmitter release

    Pascal S. Kaeser;Wade G. Regehr

  • Short-term forms of presynaptic plasticity

    Diasynou Fioravante;Wade G Regehr

  • Calcium Dependence and Recovery Kinetics of Presynaptic Depression at the Climbing Fiber to Purkinje Cell Synapse

    Jeremy S. Dittman;Wade G. Regehr

  • Cerebellar depolarization-induced suppression of inhibition is mediated by endogenous cannabinoids.

    Anatol C. Kreitzer;Wade G. Regehr

  • Control of Neurotransmitter Release by Presynaptic Waveform at the Granule Cell to Purkinje Cell Synapse

    Bernardo L. Sabatini;Wade G. Regehr

  • Delayed Release of Neurotransmitter from Cerebellar Granule Cells

    Pradeep P. Atluri;Wade G. Regehr

  • The calcium sensor synaptotagmin 7 is required for synaptic facilitation.

    Skyler L. Jackman;Josef Turecek;Justine E. Belinsky;Wade G. Regehr

  • A transcriptomic atlas of mouse cerebellar cortex comprehensively defines cell types

    Velina Kozareva;Caroline Martin;Tomas Osorno;Stephanie Rudolph

  • TIMING OF SYNAPTIC TRANSMISSION

    B L Sabatini;W G Regehr

  • Contributions of calcium-dependent and calcium-independent mechanisms to presynaptic inhibition at a cerebellar synapse

    Jeremy S. Dittman;Wade G. Regehr

  • Activity-Dependent Regulation of Synapses by Retrograde Messengers

    Wade G. Regehr;Megan R. Carey;Aaron R. Best

Frequent Co-Authors

David W. Tank
David W. Tank Princeton University
Bernardo L. Sabatini
Bernardo L. Sabatini Harvard Medical School
Anatol C. Kreitzer
Anatol C. Kreitzer University of California, San Francisco
Chinfei Chen
Chinfei Chen Boston Children's Hospital
Kristen M. Harris
Kristen M. Harris The University of Texas at Austin
Mustafa Sahin
Mustafa Sahin Boston Children's Hospital
David B. Rutledge
David B. Rutledge California Institute of Technology
Richard W. Tsien
Richard W. Tsien New York University
Constance L. Cepko
Constance L. Cepko Harvard University
Aviv Regev
Aviv Regev Genentech

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