Kathryn M. Albers

Kathryn M. Albers

University of Pittsburgh

H-index: 52

North America-United States

About Kathryn M. Albers

Kathryn M. Albers, With an exceptional h-index of 52 and a recent h-index of 27 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Pittsburgh, specializes in the field of Sensory systems.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

PDX1, a transcription factor essential for organ differentiation, regulates SERCA-dependent Ca2+ homeostasis in sensory neurons

Neural Activity And The Immune Response In The Colon

Peripheral Morphine Tolerance Involves Keratinocytes And PDGFR_ Signaling

Neuronally expressed PDL1, not PD1, suppresses acute nociception

Use of OptogeneticsOptogenetics for the Study of Skin–Nerve Communication

Translational Physiology: Optogenetic activation of the distal colon epithelium engages enteric nervous system circuits to initiate motility patterns

Optogenetic activation of the distal colon epithelium engages enteric nervous system circuits to initiate motility patterns

Synaptic components, function and modulation characterized by GCaMP6f Ca2+ imaging in mouse cholinergic myenteric ganglion neurons

Kathryn M. Albers Information

University

Position

Professor of Neurobiology

Citations(all)

9811

Citations(since 2020)

2465

Cited By

8113

hIndex(all)

52

hIndex(since 2020)

27

i10Index(all)

106

i10Index(since 2020)

54

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Kathryn M. Albers Skills & Research Interests

Sensory systems

Top articles of Kathryn M. Albers

PDX1, a transcription factor essential for organ differentiation, regulates SERCA-dependent Ca2+ homeostasis in sensory neurons

Cell Calcium

2024/6/1

Neural Activity And The Immune Response In The Colon

The Journal of Pain

2023/4/1

Peripheral Morphine Tolerance Involves Keratinocytes And PDGFR_ Signaling

The Journal of Pain

2023/4/1

Neuronally expressed PDL1, not PD1, suppresses acute nociception

Brain, behavior, and immunity

2022/11/1

Use of OptogeneticsOptogenetics for the Study of Skin–Nerve Communication

2022/5/27

Translational Physiology: Optogenetic activation of the distal colon epithelium engages enteric nervous system circuits to initiate motility patterns

American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology

2021/10/10

Optogenetic activation of the distal colon epithelium engages enteric nervous system circuits to initiate motility patterns

American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology

2021/10/1

Synaptic components, function and modulation characterized by GCaMP6f Ca2+ imaging in mouse cholinergic myenteric ganglion neurons

Frontiers in Physiology

2021/8/2

Pain in inflammatory bowel disease: optogenetic strategies for study of neural–epithelial signaling

2021/7/1

Nonpeptidergic neurons suppress mast cells via glutamate to maintain skin homeostasis

Cell

2021/4/15

Optogenetic inhibition of the colon epithelium reduces hypersensitivity in a mouse model of inflammatory bowel disease

Pain

2021/4/1

Sympathetic input to multiple cell types in mouse and human colon produces region-specific responses

Gastroenterology

2021/3/1

A prospective randomized controlled study of auricular point acupressure to manage chronic low back pain in older adults: study protocol

Trials

2020/12

Unique molecular characteristics of visceral afferents arising from different levels of the neuraxis: location of afferent somata predicts function and stimulus detection …

Journal of Neuroscience

2020/9/16

Epithelial–neuronal communication in the colon: implications for visceral pain

2020/3/1

Extracellular ATP released from Candida albicans activates non-peptidergic neurons to augment host defense

BioRxiv

2020/1/28

See List of Professors in Kathryn M. Albers University(University of Pittsburgh)