Appears in Networks 1

Provenance

PubMed:18986241

Moreover, there is evidence from experimental lesions in animals [43–45] and from postmortem human brain studies [46,47] suggesting that many cholinergic neurons shrink, are depleted of phenotypic markers, and/or persist in an atrophic state after injury or during the pathological process, rather than degenerate.

Annotations 2

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BEL Commons is developed and maintained in an academic capacity by Charles Tapley Hoyt and Daniel Domingo-Fernández at the Fraunhofer SCAI Department of Bioinformatics with support from the IMI project, AETIONOMY. It is built on top of PyBEL, an open source project. Please feel free to contact us here to give us feedback or report any issues. Also, see our Publishing Notes and Data Protection information.

If you find BEL Commons useful in your work, please consider citing: Hoyt, C. T., Domingo-Fernández, D., & Hofmann-Apitius, M. (2018). BEL Commons: an environment for exploration and analysis of networks encoded in Biological Expression Language. Database, 2018(3), 1–11.