All Stories

  1. Preclinical development of moxidectin as a novel therapeutic for alcohol use disorder
  2. P2X4 receptors regulate dopamine neurotransmission
  3. Sex and the Lab: An Alcohol-Focused Commentary on the NIH Initiative to Balance Sex in Cell and Animal Studies
  4. A Pilot Study of the Safety and Initial Efficacy of Ivermectin for the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder
  5. Utilizing an Orally Dissolving Strip for Pharmacological and Toxicological Studies: A Simple and Humane Alternative to Oral Gavage for Animals
  6. Oral delivery of ivermectin using a fast dissolving oral film: Implications for repurposing ivermectin as a pharmacotherapy for alcohol use disorder
  7. Chronic ethanol exposure combined with high fat diet up-regulates P2X7 receptors that parallels neuroinflammation and neuronal loss in C57BL/6J mice
  8. The Importance of Animals in Advancing Research on Alcohol Use Disorders
  9. Multiday administration of ivermectin is effective in reducing alcohol intake in mice at doses shown to be safe in humans
  10. P2X4 receptors (P2X4Rs) represent a novel target for the development of drugs to prevent and/or treat alcohol use disorders
  11. Contribution of P2X4 Receptors to Ethanol Intake in Male C57BL/6 Mice
  12. Avermectins differentially affect ethanol intake and receptor function: implications for developing new therapeutics for alcohol use disorders
  13. Structural Models of Ligand-Gated Ion Channels: Sites of Action for Anesthetics and Ethanol
  14. Tryptophan 46 is a site for ethanol and ivermectin action in P2X4 receptors
  15. Sociocommunicative and Sensorimotor Impairments in Male P2X4-Deficient Mice
  16. Pharmacological insights into the role of P2X4 receptors in behavioural regulation: lessons from ivermectin
  17. Ivermectin reduces alcohol intake and preference in mice
  18. Recent Advances in the Discovery and Preclinical Testing of Novel Compounds for the Prevention and/or Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorders
  19. Alcohol-Binding Sites in Distinct Brain Proteins: The Quest for Atomic Level Resolution
  20. Implication of the Purinergic System in Alcohol Use Disorders
  21. Functional Role of the Intracellular Loop Linking Transmembrane Domains 6 and 7 of the Human Dipeptide Transporter hPEPT1
  22. Molecular targets and mechanisms for ethanol action in glycine receptors
  23. A point mutation in the ectodomain-transmembrane 2 interface eliminates the inhibitory effects of ethanol in P2X4 receptors
  24. Mutagenesis and Cysteine Scanning of Transmembrane Domain 10 of the Human Dipeptide Transporter
  25. Loop 2 Structure in Glycine and GABAAReceptors Plays a Key Role in Determining Ethanol Sensitivity
  26. Molecular Weight and Volume at Position 46 in Transmembrane Domain 1 (TM1) are Important Determinants for Ethanol Sensitivity in P2X4 Receptors
  27. Roles of ectodomain and transmembrane regions in ethanol and agonist action in purinergic P2X2 and P2X3 receptors
  28. Targets for ethanol action and antagonism in Loop 2 of the extracellular domain of glycine receptors
  29. Ethanol Inhibits Functional Activity of the Human Intestinal Dipeptide Transporter hPepT1 Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes
  30. Evidence that ethanol acts on a target in Loop 2 of the extracellular domain of α1 glycine receptors
  31. Cysteine scanning of transmembrane domain three of the human dipeptide transporter: Implications for substrate transport
  32. A Charge Pair Interaction Between Arg282 in Transmembrane Segment 7 and Asp341 in Transmembrane Segment 8 of hPepT1
  33. Effects of Ethanol on Adenosine 5'-Triphosphate-Gated Purinergic and 5-Hydroxytryptamine3 Receptors
  34. Propofol acts on different sites than ethanol and butanol in recombinant glycine receptors: Evidence from pressure studies
  35. Effects of the abused solvent toluene on recombinant P2X receptors expressed in HEK293 cells
  36. Multiple sites of ethanol action in alpha1 and alpha2 glycine receptors suggested by sensitivity to pressure antagonism
  37. Biophysical Evidence for His 57 as a Proton-Binding Site in the Mammalian Intestinal Transporter hPepT1
  38. Benzodiazepine agonist and inverse agonist coupling in GABAA receptors antagonized by increased atmospheric pressure
  39. Ethanol Potentiation of Glycine Receptors Expressed in Xenopus Oocytes Antagonized by Increased Atmospheric Pressure
  40. Ethanol Sensitivity in ATP-Gated P2X Receptors Is Subunit Dependent
  41. Ethanol Sensitivity in ATP-Gated P2X Receptors Is Subunit Dependent
  42. Pressure-sensitive and -insensitive coupling in γ-aminobutyric acid a receptors
  43. Direct Evidence for a Cause-Effect Link Between Ethanol Potentiation of GABAA Receptor Function and Intoxication From Hyperbaric Studies in C57, LS, and SS Mice
  44. Direct Evidence for a Cause-Effect Link Between Ethanol Potentiation of GABAA Receptor Function and Intoxication From Hyperbaric Studies in C57, LS, and SS Mice
  45. Ethanol Enhances GABAA Receptor Function in Short Sleep and Long Sleep Mouse Brain Membranes
  46. Ethanol Enhances GABAA Receptor Function in Short Sleep and Long Sleep Mouse Brain Membranes
  47. Effects of Posttraining Ethanol on an Appetitive Task
  48. In vivo and in vitro hyperbaric studies in mice suggest novel sites of action for ethanol
  49. Direct Antagonism of Ethanol??s Effects On GABAA Receptors by Increased Atmospheric Pressure
  50. Direct Antagonism of Ethanol's Effects On GABAA Receptors by Increased Atmospheric Pressure
  51. Low-Level Hyperbaric Exposure Antagonizes Locomotor Effects of Ethanol and n-Propanol But Not Morphine in C57BL Mice
  52. Low-Level Hyperbaric Antagonism of Ethanol's Anticonvulsant Property in C57BL/6J Mice