
Publications of F. Doering
All genres
Journal Article (12)
1.
Journal Article
24 (8), pp. 2264 - 2274 (2006)
Novel Drosophila two-pore domain K+ channels: rescue of channel function by heteromeric assembly. European Journal of Neuroscience 2.
Journal Article
277 (28), pp. 25554 - 25561 (2002)
Inwardly rectifying K+ (Kir) channels in Drosophila - A crucial role of cellular milieu factors for Kir channel function. Journal of Biological Chemistry 3.
Journal Article
483, pp. 93 - 98 (2000)
Genomic structure and promoter analysis of the rat Kir7.1 potassium channel gene (Kcnj13). FEBS Letters 4.
Journal Article
20, pp. 156 - 162 (2000)
Neuronal inwardly rectifying K+ channels differentially couple to PDZ proteins of the PSD-95/SAP 90 family. Journal of Neuroscience 5.
Journal Article
466, pp. 115 - 120 (2000)
Stable cation coordination at a single outer pore residue defines permeation properties in Kir channels. FEBS Letters 6.
Journal Article
54, pp. 560 - 563 (1998)
Gene structure and assignment to chromosome 2q37 of the human inwardly rectifying K+ channel Kir 7.1 (KCNJ13). Genomics 7.
Journal Article
18, pp. 8625 - 8636 (1998)
The epithelial inward rectifier channel Kir7.1 displays unusual K+ permeation properties. Journal of Neuroscience 8.
Journal Article
18, pp. 4096 - 4105 (1998)
Kir2.4: A novel K+ inward rectifier channel associated with motoneurons of cranial nerve nuclei. Journal of Neuroscience 9.
Journal Article
273, pp. 34063 - 34068 (1998)
Acute suppression of inwardly rectifying Kir2.1 channels by direct tyrosine kinase phosphorylation. Journal of Biological Chemistry 10.
Journal Article
433 (6 Suppl. Suppl. S), p. O106 - O106 (1997)
A pore loop residue controls subunit assembly in G protein-activated inwardly rectifying K+ channels. Pflugers Archiv-European Journal of Physiology 11.
Journal Article
9 (3), pp. 194 - 206 (1997)
Subunit interactions in the assembly of neuronal Kir3.0 inwardly rectifying K+ channels. Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience 12.
Journal Article
15 (23), pp. 6460 - 6475 (1996)
Two GTPase isoforms, ypt31p and ypt32p, are essential for Golgi function in yeast. EMBO Journal