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About Town

About Town The Gainesville Sun ABOUT TOWN Editor s note: The Guardian no longer accepts fliers as information for events that appear under About Town. The information must be typed out and sent via email. Please include the following: type/name of event, date, time, location, speakers, theme and cost, if any, and who to contact for more information. Send via email to guardian@gainesville.com (The new email address now in effect to send announcements/information and to request coverage). The deadline is noon Fridays for publication the following Thursday. For more information, call 352-337-0376. Mobile clinic The University of Florida s College of Medicine s Mobile Outreach Clinic will provide services indefinitely from 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. every Thursday at GTEC, 2153 Hawthorne Road.

About Town

About Town The Gainesville Sun ABOUT TOWN Editor s note: The Guardian no longer accepts fliers as information for events that appear under About Town. The information must be typed out and sent via email. Please include the following: type/name of event, date, time, location, speakers, theme and cost, if any, and who to contact for more information. Send via email to guardian@gainesville.com (The new email address now in effect to send announcements/information and to request coverage). The deadline is noon Fridays for publication the following Thursday. For more information, call 352-337-0376. Football The Eastside High School football team will travel to Alachua to play Santa Fe High School in a spring football game.

Science News | Study Unveils How Proteins Control Information Processing in Brain

Representative image Halle [Germany], May 9 (ANI): A complicated interaction between different proteins is needed for information to pass from one nerve cell to the next. A team of researchers now managed to study this process in the synaptic vesicles, which play an important role in this process. The study led by a team at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU)T appeared in the journal Nature Communications. Several billion nerve cells communicate with each other in the body so that humans and other living beings can perceive and react to their environment. A host of complex chemical and electrical processes occur within a few milliseconds. Special messenger substances - known as neurotransmitters - are released at the synapses of the nerve cells. They transmit information between the individual nerve cells, explains Dr Carla Schmidt, an assistant professor at the Centre for Innovation Competence HALOmem at MLU.

How proteins control information processing in the brain

 E-Mail A complicated interaction between different proteins is needed for information to pass from one nerve cell to the next. Researchers at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) have now managed to study this process in the synaptic vesicles, which play an important role in this process. The study appeared in the journal Nature Communications. Several billion nerve cells communicate with each other in the body so that humans and other living beings can perceive and react to their environment. A host of complex chemical and electrical processes occur within a few milliseconds. Special messenger substances - known as neurotransmitters - are released at the synapses of the nerve cells. They transmit information between the individual nerve cells, explains Dr Carla Schmidt, an assistant professor at the Centre for Innovation Competence HALOmem at MLU. The messenger substances are packed into small vesicles called synaptic vesicles, which fuse with the cell membran

How proteins control information processing in brain

Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg A complicated interaction between different proteins is needed for information to pass from one nerve cell to the next. Researchers at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) have now managed to study this process in the synaptic vesicles, which play an important role in this process. The study appeared in the journal Nature Communications. Several billion nerve cells communicate with each other in the body so that humans and other living beings can perceive and react to their environment. A host of complex chemical and electrical processes occur within a few milliseconds. “Special messenger substances – known as neurotransmitters – are released at the synapses of the nerve cells. They transmit information between the individual nerve cells,” explains Dr Carla Schmidt, an assistant professor at the Centre for Innovation Competence HALOmem at MLU. The messenger substances are packed into small vesicles called synaptic v

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