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Bruce A. Rheaume

Researcher at University of Connecticut

Publications -  16
Citations -  367

Bruce A. Rheaume is an academic researcher from University of Connecticut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Axon & Regeneration (biology). The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 13 publications receiving 263 citations. Previous affiliations of Bruce A. Rheaume include University of Connecticut Health Center & University of New Hampshire at Manchester.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Single cell transcriptome profiling of retinal ganglion cells identifies cellular subtypes.

TL;DR: This study demonstrates additional RGC heterogeneity using single cell transcriptomic analyses to classify 40 classes of RGCs in early postnatal mice before eye opening and shows a hierarchy in diversification from a cell-type population to subtypes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Author Correction: Single cell transcriptome profiling of retinal ganglion cells identifies cellular subtypes.

TL;DR: The original version of the Supplementary Information file associated with this Article contained an error in panel c, in which the graph was inadvertently replaced with a duplicate of the graph in panel a.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Corticotrope Gene Expression Upon Increased Expression of Peptidylglycine α-Amidating Monooxygenase.

TL;DR: The screen identified transcription factors, peptidyl prolyl isomerases, endosomal/lysosomal proteins, and proteins involved in tissue-specific responses to glucose and amino acid availability that had not previously been recognized as relevant to the secretory pathway.
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Sex-Specific Gene Expression in the Mouse Nucleus Accumbens Before and After Cocaine Exposure.

TL;DR: S sensitization to the locomotor effects of cocaine was most pronounced in the ovariectomized mice receiving estradiol, was greater in cycling females than in males, and failed to occur in ovariECTomized/placebo mice.
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Corneal nonmyelinating Schwann cells illuminated by single-cell transcriptomics and visualized by protein biomarkers.

TL;DR: The cornea is the most innervated tissue in the human body and myelinated axons upon inserting into the peripheral corneal stroma lose their myelin sheaths and continue into the central cornea wrapped by only nonmyelinating Corneal Schwann cells (nm‐cSCs), believed to be important for central vision.