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The female brindled mouse as a model of menkes’ disease: The relationship of fur pattern to behavioral and neurochemical abnormalities
Parthena M. Martin
, Mika Irino
, Kinuko Suzuki
, Mark H. Lewis
, Richard B. Mailman
Department of Neurology
Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences
Penn State Neuroscience Institute
Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics
Research output
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Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
3
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'The female brindled mouse as a model of menkes’ disease: The relationship of fur pattern to behavioral and neurochemical abnormalities'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Postnatal Day
100%
Neurochemicals
100%
Anterior Cingulate Cortex
75%
Mutant Mice
25%
Dopamine
25%
Behavioral Deficits
25%
Littermate
25%
Sex-related
25%
All Ages
25%
Neurodegeneration
25%
Behavior Modification
25%
Copper Metabolism
25%
Copper Homeostasis
25%
Coat Color
25%
Norepinephrine Levels
25%
Tyrosinase Activity
25%
Hypothalamus
25%
Neurochemical Changes
25%
Dopamine Metabolites
25%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Mouse
100%
Neurochemical
100%
Metabolite
33%
Homeostasis
33%
Quantitative Technique
33%
Tyrosinase
33%
Copper Metabolism
33%
Mouse Mutant
33%
Noradrenalin Level
33%
Norepinephrine
33%
Nerve Cell Degeneration
33%
Hemizygote
33%
Neuroscience
Cingulate Cortex
100%
Thalamus
66%
Norepinephrine
66%
Behavior (Neuroscience)
33%
Metabolic Pathway
33%
Hypothalamus
33%
Nerve Cell Degeneration
33%