Publications of T. Moser
All genres
Journal Article (82)
61.
Journal Article
5, 2081 (2016)
New insights into cochlear sound encoding. F1000Research 62.
Journal Article
113 (32), pp. E4716 - E4725 (2016)
Hair cells use active zones with different voltage dependence of Ca2+ influx to decompose sounds into complementary neural codes. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 63.
Journal Article
35 (10), pp. 1018 - 1020 (2016)
Eyes without a ribbon. EMBO Journal 64.
Journal Article
35 (10), pp. 1018 - 1020 (2016)
Eyes without a ribbon. EMBO Journal 65.
Journal Article
34 (21), pp. 2686 - 2702 (2015)
Disruption of adaptor protein 2μ (AP‐2μ) in cochlear hair cells impairs vesicle reloading of synaptic release sites and hearing. EMBO Journal 66.
Journal Article
7 (295), 295fs28 (2015)
Gene therapy for deafness: How close are we? Science Translational Medicine 67.
Journal Article
7, 295fs28 (2015)
Gene therapy for deafness: how close are we? Science translational medicine 68.
Journal Article
27 (47), pp. 12933 - 12944 (2007)
Probing the mechanism of exocytosis at the hair cell ribbon synapse. Journal of Neuroscience 69.
Journal Article
434 (7035), pp. 889 - 894 (2005)
Hair cell synaptic ribbons are essential for synchronous auditory signalling. Nature 70.
Journal Article
98 (20), pp. 11680 - 11685 (2001)
Intracellular calcium dependence of large dense-core vesicle exocytosis in the absence of synaptotagmin I. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 71.
Journal Article
31 (4), pp. 581 - 591 (2001)
Munc18-1 promotes larger dense-core vesicle docking. Neuron 72.
Journal Article
29 (3), pp. 681 - 690 (2001)
Calcium Dependence of Exocytosis and Endocytosis at the Cochlear Inner Hair Cell Afferent Synapse. Neuron 73.
Journal Article
21, pp. 4593 - 4599 (2001)
The presynayptic function of mouse cochlear inner hair cells during development of hearing. Journal of Neuroscience 74.
Journal Article
20 (22), pp. 8377 - 8383 (2000)
The Readily Releasable Pool of Vesicles in Chromaffin Cells Is Replenished in a Temperature-Dependent Manner and Transiently Overfills at 37°C. The Journal of Neuroscience 75.
Journal Article
20 (22), pp. 8323 - 8330 (2000)
R-Type Ca2+ Channels Are Coupled to the Rapid Component of Secretion in Mouse Adrenal Slice Chromaffin Cells. The Journal of Neuroscience 76.
Journal Article
97, pp. 883 - 888 (2000)
Kinetics of exocytosis and endocytosis at the cochlear inner hair cell afferent synapse of the mouse. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 77.
Journal Article
23 (3), pp. 607 - 615 (1999)
Mechanisms Underlying Phasic and Sustained Secretion in Chromaffin Cells from Mouse Adrenal Slices. Neuron 78.
Journal Article
506, pp. 195 - 205 (1998)
Low-conductance intercellular coupling between mouse chromaffin cells in situ. Journal of Physiology 79.
Journal Article
20 (6), pp. 1243 - 1253 (1998)
Cytosolic Ca2+ Acts by Two Separate Pathways to Modulate the Supply of Release-Competent Vesicles in Chromaffin Cells. Neuron 80.
Journal Article
94 (13), pp. 6735 - 6740 (1997)
Estimation of mean exocytic vesicle capacitance in mouse adrenal chromaffin cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America