Article Information
- Received August 9, 2005
- Revision received November 29, 2005
- Accepted November 30, 2005
- First published January 25, 2006.
- Version of record published January 25, 2006.
Author Information
Author contributions
Disclosures
- Received August 9, 2005.
- Revision received November 29, 2005.
- Accepted November 30, 2005.
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S.F. is supported by National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke Grant R01 NS39074, a Klingenstein Award, and the J. David Gladstone Institutes. S.R.C is supported by a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation. V.R.R. is supported by the National Institutes of Health–National Institute of General Medical Sciences University of California, San Francisco Medical Scientist Training Program and a fellowship from the Epilepsy Foundation of America. We are grateful for the gift of NR1−/− mice from Dr. T. Curran (St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN). All NR1 subunit constructs were gifts from Drs. M. Ehlers (Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC) and R. Huganir (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD), except the NR1 subunit pore mutant, which was a gift from Dr. E. Ziff (Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY). GFP-CaMKIIa was a gift from Dr. T. Meyer (Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA), and the plasmids for enhanced GFP, enhanced YFP, and monomeric RFP were gifts from Dr. R. Y. Tsien (Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, San Diego, CA). The CaM1234 construct was a gift from Dr. D. Yue (Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine). We thank Shyamal Kapadia and other members of the Finkbeiner laboratory for useful discussions, Kelley Nelson for administrative assistance, and Stephen Ordway and Gary Howard for editorial assistance.
- Correspondence should be addressed to Steven Finkbeiner, Gladstone Institute of Neurological Disease, 1650 Owens Street, San Francisco, CA 94158. Email: sfinkbeiner{at}gladstone.ucsf.edu
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