Sarah Wolfe

Affiliations: 
ICMB University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, U.S.A. 
Area:
alcohol, addiction
Google:
"Sarah Wolfe"
Mean distance: 15.58 (cluster 11)
 
SNBCP
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Rodriguez L, Kirson D, Wolfe SA, et al. (2022) Alcohol Dependence Induces CRF Sensitivity in Female Central Amygdala GABA Synapses. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 23
Patel RR, Wolfe SA, Borgonetti V, et al. (2022) Ethanol withdrawal-induced adaptations in prefrontal corticotropin releasing factor receptor 1-expressing neurons regulate anxiety and conditioned rewarding effects of ethanol. Molecular Psychiatry
Wolfe SA, Vozella V, Roberto M. (2022) The Synaptic Interactions of Alcohol and the Endogenous Cannabinoid System. Alcohol Research : Current Reviews. 42: 03
Kirson D, Khom S, Rodriguez L, et al. (2021) Sex Differences in Acute Alcohol Sensitivity of Naïve and Alcohol Dependent Central Amygdala GABA Synapses. Alcohol and Alcoholism (Oxford, Oxfordshire)
Warden AS, Wolfe SA, Khom S, et al. (2020) Microglia Control Escalation of Drinking in Alcohol-Dependent Mice: Genomic and Synaptic Drivers. Biological Psychiatry
Agoglia AE, Zhu M, Ying R, et al. (2020) Corticotropin releasing factor receptor-1 neurons in the lateral amygdala display selective sensitivity to acute and chronic ethanol exposure. Eneuro
Wolfe SA, Farris SP, Mayfield JE, et al. (2018) Ethanol and a rapid-acting antidepressant produce overlapping changes in exon expression in the synaptic transcriptome. Neuropharmacology
Wolfe S, Heaney C, Niere F, et al. (2017) The acute alcohol transcriptome parallels that of rapid antidepressants Alcohol. 60: 242
Wolfe SA, Workman ER, Heaney CF, et al. (2016) FMRP regulates an ethanol-dependent shift in GABABR function and expression with rapid antidepressant properties. Nature Communications. 7: 12867
Sosanya NM, Brager DH, Wolfe S, et al. (2015) Rapamycin reveals an mTOR-independent repression of Kv1.1 expression during epileptogenesis. Neurobiology of Disease. 73: 96-105
See more...