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Giulio Taglialatela

Researcher at University of Texas Medical Branch

Publications -  130
Citations -  5600

Giulio Taglialatela is an academic researcher from University of Texas Medical Branch. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nerve growth factor & Amyloid beta. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 115 publications receiving 4961 citations. Previous affiliations of Giulio Taglialatela include Baylor College of Medicine & Sigma-Tau.

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Long-Term Dietary Strawberry, Spinach, or Vitamin E Supplementation Retards the Onset of Age-Related Neuronal Signal-Transduction and Cognitive Behavioral Deficits

TL;DR: Phytochemicals present in antioxidant-rich foods such as spinach may be beneficial in retarding functional age-related CNS and cognitive behavioral deficits and, perhaps, may have some benefit in neurodegenerative disease.
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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play an important role in a rat model of neuropathic pain

TL;DR: Systemic injection of a ROS scavenger, phenyl‐N‐tert‐butylnitrone (PBN), relieves SNL‐induced mechanical allodynia in a dose‐dependent manner, and systemic administration of non‐toxic doses of free radical scavengers could be useful for treatment of neuropathic pain.
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NFκB-Activated Astroglial Release of Complement C3 Compromises Neuronal Morphology and Function Associated with Alzheimer’s Disease

TL;DR: Dysregulation of neuron-glia interaction through NFκB/C3/C 3aR signaling may contribute to synaptic dysfunction in AD, and C3aR antagonists may be therapeutically beneficial.
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Blueberry Supplemented Diet: Effects on Object Recognition Memory and Nuclear Factor-kappa B Levels in Aged Rats

TL;DR: This study determined whether such supplementation could prevent impaired object recognition memory and elevated levels of the oxidative stress-responsive protein, nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) in aged Fischer-344 rats.
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Intermediate- and long-term recognition memory deficits in Tg2576 mice are reversed with acute calcineurin inhibition.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that aberrant CaN activity mediates object recognition deficits in 5 months old Tg2576 when NOR is employed as a test for ITM and LTM.