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Advanced development of conductive biomaterials for enhanced peripheral nerve regeneration: a review. [PDF]
Wang J+7 more
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Focus on P2X7R in microglia: its mechanism of action and therapeutic prospects in various neuropathic pain models. [PDF]
Zhang K+4 more
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Clinical significance of HER2 overexpression in biliary tract carcinoma --a meta analysis. [PDF]
Xu H, Liang Y, Tang W, Yang X, Du X.
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International Journal of Neuroscience, 1985
Nerve growth factor is a polypeptide hormone that is required for the normal growth and development of the embryonic sensory and sympathetic nervous systems. On these cells, there are two different receptors for the nerve growth factor.
R. Stach+3 more
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Nerve growth factor is a polypeptide hormone that is required for the normal growth and development of the embryonic sensory and sympathetic nervous systems. On these cells, there are two different receptors for the nerve growth factor.
R. Stach+3 more
semanticscholar +4 more sources
Epidermal growth factor receptor ≠ nerve growth factor
Neurobiology of Aging, 1989I am perplexed by the authors' complete lack of definition of neurotrophic factors. The agents Butcher and Woolf want to blame are neurite promoting factors, not neurotrophic factors. Treatment of Alzheimer's disease with NGF antagonists might instead exacerbate the death of both basal forebrain neurons and their cortical target neurons, accelerating ...
L. R. Williams
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Nerve growth factor in the psychiatric brain.
Rivista di psichiatria, 2020The nerve growth factor (NGF) belongs to a family of proteins named neurotrophins, consisting of NGF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), NT-4/5 and NT-6.
S. Ciafrè+13 more
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The nerve growth factor family of receptors
Trends in Neurosciences, 1992The neurotrophins, of which nerve growth factor (NGF) is the best known example, support the survival and differentiation of chick embryo sensory neurons at extremely low concentrations, 10(-12) M or less. These same neurons display two different classes of neurotrophin receptors with dissociation constants of 10(-11) M and 10(-9) M, respectively ...
Eric M. Shooter, Susan O. Meakin
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The trk proto-oncogene product: a signal transducing receptor for nerve growth factor.
Science, 1991The trk proto-oncogene encodes a 140-kilodalton, membrane-spanning protein tyrosine kinase (p140prototrk) that is expressed only in neural tissues. Nerve growth factor (NGF) stimulates phosphorylation of p140prototrk in neural cell lines and in embryonic
D. Kaplan+4 more
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