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  • Book
    edited by Allan V. Kalueff and Carisa L. Bergner.
    Contents:
    Mutant and transgenic zebrafish in modeling neurobehavioral disorders / C.L. Bergner [and others]
    Knockout and mutant rats / M. Müller, J. Olivier and J. Homberg
    Rat mutants with lateralized rotational behavior for studying disturbances in cerebral asymmetries and their involvement in brain disorders / W. Löscher
    GABAA receptor [alpha]1 subunit (Gabra1) knockout mice: Review and new results / G.-L. Ye [and others]
    Basal ganglia disorders in genetic models and experimentally induced lesions / R. Lalonde and C. Strazielle
    Estrogen-deficient mouse models in the study of brain injury and disease / R.A. Hill and W.C. Boon
    The utility of genetically modified animals in modeling OCD-spectrum disorders / A.N. Smolinsky [and others]
    Investigating Rett syndrome through genetic mouse models: Presymptomatic, clearly symptomatic phases, and innovative therapeutic approaches / B. Filippis, L. Ricceri and G. Laviola
    Genetic animal models of anxiety / R.J. Egan [and others]
    Genetic animal models of depression / P.R. Canavello [and others]
    Environmental enrichment and gene-environment interactions in mouse models of brain disorders / A.J. Hannan
    Mutant and transgenic tools in modeling schizophrenia / L. Desbonnet [and others].
    Digital Access Springer 2010
  • Article
    Shany S, Yagil R, Berlyne GM.
    Comp Biochem Physiol B. 1978;59(2):139-40.
    1. The plasma levels of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol were measured in female dromedary camels, female sheep and Sinai desert goats. 2. The camels had levels of 443 +/- 96 ng/ml in summer, and 267 +/- 113 ng/ml in winter. 3. The sheep had levels of 40.7 +/- 9.09 ng/ml in summer and 37.1 +/- 8.82 ng/ml in winter, i.e. roughly the same as man in that region. 4. The goats had lower levels: 23.9 +/- 5.67 ng/ml in summer.
    Digital Access Access Options