James R. Bamburg
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Colorado State University
Fort Collins
CO 80523-1870
USA
Name/email consistency: high
- Amyloid beta dimers/trimers potently induce cofilin-actin rods that are inhibited by maintaining cofilin-phosphorylation. Davis, R.C., Marsden, I.T., Maloney, M.T., Minamide, L.S., Podlisny, M., Selkoe, D.J., Bamburg, J.R. Mol. Neurodegener (2011)
- ADF/Cofilin-actin rods in neurodegenerative diseases. Bamburg, J.R., Bernstein, B.W., Davis, R.C., Flynn, K.C., Goldsbury, C., Jensen, J.R., Maloney, M.T., Marsden, I.T., Minamide, L.S., Pak, C.W., Shaw, A.E., Whiteman, I., Wiggan, O. Curr. Alzheimer. Res (2010)
- Cytoskeletal pathologies of Alzheimer disease. Bamburg, J.R., Bloom, G.S. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton (2009)
- Introduction to cytoskeletal dynamics and pathfinding of neuronal growth cones. Bamburg, J.R. J. Histochem. Cytochem. (2003)
- ADF/cofilin and actin dynamics in disease. Bamburg, J.R., Wiggan, O.P. Trends Cell Biol. (2002)
- Putting a new twist on actin: ADF/cofilins modulate actin dynamics. Bamburg, J.R., McGough, A., Ono, S. Trends Cell Biol. (1999)