Eye Physiology
Mostrando 13-24 de 27 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Clinical Studies on the Physiology of the Eye
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14. The Eye. Vol. I. Vegetative Physiology and Biochemistry
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15. Adler's Physiology of the Eye: Clinical Application
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16. Physiology of the Eye. An Introduction to the Vegetative Functions
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17. The Windows of Soul: Psychological Physiology of the Human Eye and Primary Glaucomas
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18. Studies on the Physiology of the Eye. Still reactions, sleep, dreams, hibernation, repression, hypnosis, narcosis, coma, and allied conditions
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19. Studies on the Physiology of the Eye, Still Reaction, Sleep, Dreams, Hibernation, Repression, Hypnosis, Narcosis, Coma, and Allied Conditions
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20. Torsional conjugate eye movements induced by pupillary light stimulation
A patient with a brain-stem mass and some evidence of brain-stem dysfunction showed torsional conjugate eye movements after eyelid opening in an illuminated environment, also on pupillary light stimulation. The response appeared after a latency period of 1-2 s, and occurred on stimulation of either the right or left eye. The ocular torsion was always bilater
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21. Peropsin, a novel visual pigment-like protein located in the apical microvilli of the retinal pigment epithelium
A visual pigment-like protein, referred to as peropsin, has been identified by large-scale sequencing of cDNAs derived from human ocular tissues. The corresponding mRNA was found only in the eye, where it is localized to the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Peropsin immunoreactivity, visualized by light and electron microscopy, localizes the protein to the
The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
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22. Regulation of multimers via truncated isoforms: a novel mechanism to control nitric-oxide signaling
Nitric oxide (NO) is an essential regulator of Drosophila development and physiology. We describe a novel mode of regulation of NO synthase (NOS) function that uses endogenously produced truncated protein isoforms of Drosophila NOS (DNOS). These isoforms inhibit NOS enzymatic activity in vitro and in vivo, reflecting their ability to form complexes with the
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
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23. Melanopsin: An opsin in melanophores, brain, and eye
We have identified an opsin, melanopsin, in photosensitive dermal melanophores of Xenopus laevis. Its deduced amino acid sequence shares greatest homology with cephalopod opsins. The predicted secondary structure of melanopsin indicates the presence of a long cytoplasmic tail with multiple putative phosphorylation sites, suggesting that this opsin’s functi
National Academy of Sciences.
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24. Cloning, localization, and functional expression of the electrogenic Na+ bicarbonate cotransporter (NBCe1) from zebrafish
Mutations in the electrogenic Na+/nHCO3− cotransporter (NBCe1, SLC4A4) cause severe proximal renal tubular acidosis, glaucoma, and cataracts in humans, indicating NBCe1 has a critical role in acid-base homeostasis and ocular fluid transport. To better understand the homeostatic roles and protein ontogeny of NBCe1, we have cloned, localized, and downregulat
American Physiological Society.