Browsing by Author "Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra"
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
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Caracterización bioquímica y electrofisiológica de los receptores de rianodina de cerebelo de ave Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra (Universidad de Chile, 1996)
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Bertin, Francisca; Moya Alvarado, Guillermo Adrián; Quiroz Manríquez, Eduardo; Ibacache, Andrés; Köhler Solís, Andrés; Oliva, Carlos; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra (MDPI, 2022)The vertebrates’ scaffold proteins of the Dlg-MAGUK family are involved in the recruitment, clustering, and anchoring of glutamate receptors to the postsynaptic density, particularly the NMDA subtype glutamate-receptors ...
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Fernández, María P.; Rittschof, Clare C.; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra (Frontiers Media, 2021)
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Barros, L. Felipe; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra; Weber, Bruno (ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON, 2015)Brain energy metabolism powers information processing and behavior, much as electricity powers a computer. However, a recent study in insects suggests that this relationship is more interesting, causally linking aggressive ...
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Guzmán Palma, Pablo; Contreras, Esteban G.; Mora, Natalia; Smith, Macarena; González Ramírez, M. Constanza; Campusano, Jorge M.; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra; Hassan, Bassem A.; Oliva, Carlos (Frontiers Media, 2021)Neurogenesis is achieved through a sequence of steps that include specification and differentiation of progenitors into mature neurons. Frequently, precursors migrate to distinct positions before terminal differentiation. ...
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Contreras, Esteban G.; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra (SAGE, 2022)In the wild, animals face different challenges including multiple events of food scarcity. How they overcome these conditions is essential for survival. Thus, adaptation mechanisms evolved to allow the development and ...
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Gutiérrez Contreras, Esteban; Glavic Maurer, Álvaro Alberto; Brand, Andrea; Sierralta Jara, Jimena Alejandra (Soc. Neuroscience, 2021)The adaptable transcriptional response to changes in food availability not only ensures animal survival but also lets embryonic development progress. Interestingly, the CNS is preferentially protected from periods of ...