28
November
Amy Hart’s article: “Candidate gene studies of a promising intermediate phenotype: failure to replicate” accepted for publication in Neuropsychopharmacology
Amy’s article: “Candidate gene studies of a promising intermediate phenotype: failure to replicate” has been accepted for publication in Neuropsychopharmacology. You can find the full article here.
27
October
Margaret Distler & Dr. Abraham Palmer’s review of Glo1 and MG accepted for publication in Frontiers in Genetics
Margaret and Abe’s review article: “Role of Glyoxalase 1 (Glo1) and methylglyoxal (MG) in behavior: recent advances and mechanistic insights” has been accepted for publication in Frontiers in Behavioral and Psychiatric Genetics. You can find the article here.
07
August
Amy Hart’s paper ‘Genome-wide association study of d-amphetamine response in healthy volunteers identifies putative associations, including cadherin 13 (CDH13)’ accepted for publication in PLoS ONE
After a lengthy review process Amy’s paper is finally in press. Other authors include Barbara E. Engelhardt*, Margaret C. Wardle, Greta Sokoloff, Matthew Stephens, Harriet de Wit and Abraham A. Palmer.
21
May
Numerous press releases and blog posts accompany publication of JCI article about Glo1
Here is are some of the articles about Margaret’s paper:
06
April
Camron Bryant’s paper accepted for publication in Genes, Brain & Behavior
The article “”Congenic dissection of a major QTL for methamphetamine sensitivity implicates epistasis” has been accepted for publication in Genes, Brain & Behavior. Here is a link to the article. Co-authors include undergraduates Michael Guido and Loren Cole.
04
April
Margaret Distler’s paper accepted for publication in the Journal of Clinical Investigation
Margaret’s paper, “Glyoxalase 1 increases anxiety by reducing GABAA receptor agonist,” has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. This paper had been under review at various journals for more than a year. It was finally accepted the day before Margaret defended her thesis! Congratulations, Margaret!