William F. Gilly
Affiliations: | Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, CA, United States |
Area:
Squid giant axon, Na channels, K channels, Ca channels, Conus toxinsGoogle:
"William Gilly"Mean distance: 15.98 (cluster 11)
Children
Sign in to add traineeBrigitta B. Gundersen | research assistant | 2004-2005 | Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University |
Frank T. Horrigan | grad student | Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University | |
Joshua J. Rosenthal | grad student | 1996 | Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University (Chemistry Tree) |
Mary Teresa Lucero | post-doc | Stanford University, Hopkins Marine Station |
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Publications
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Gilly WF, Renken C, Rosenthal J, et al. (2020) Specialization for rapid excitation in fast squid tentacle muscle involves action potentials absent in slow arm muscle. The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Li DH, Gilly WF. (2019) Hypoxia tolerance of giant axon-mediated escape jetting in California market squid (). The Journal of Experimental Biology. 222 |
Gilly WF, Hopkins B, Mackie GO. (2019) Development of Giant Motor Axons and Neural Control of Escape Responses in Squid Embryos and Hatchlings. The Biological Bulletin. 180: 209-220 |
Rosen HE, Gilly WF. (2017) Myogenic activity and serotonergic inhibition in the chromatophore network of the squids, Dosidicus gigas (Family Ommastrephidae) and Doryteuthis opalescens (Family Loliginidae). The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Gilly WF, Richmond TA, Duda TF, et al. (2011) A diverse family of novel peptide toxins from an unusual cone snail, Conus californicus. The Journal of Experimental Biology. 214: 147-61 |
Kelley WP, Schulz JR, Jakubowski JA, et al. (2006) Two toxins from Conus striatus that individually induce tetanic paralysis. Biochemistry. 45: 14212-22 |
Yeomans DC, Levinson SR, Peters MC, et al. (2005) Decrease in inflammatory hyperalgesia by herpes vector-mediated knockdown of Nav1.7 sodium channels in primary afferents. Human Gene Therapy. 16: 271-7 |
Sack JT, Aldrich RW, Gilly WF. (2004) A gastropod toxin selectively slows early transitions in the Shaker K channel's activation pathway. The Journal of General Physiology. 123: 685-96 |
Rosenthal JJ, Gilly WF. (2003) Identified ion channels in the squid nervous system. Neuro-Signals. 12: 126-41 |
Kelley WP, Wolters AM, Sack JT, et al. (2003) Characterization of a novel gastropod toxin (6-bromo-2-mercaptotryptamine) that inhibits shaker K channel activity. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 278: 34934-42 |