Biny K. Joseph, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2009 University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, United States 
Area:
Pharmacology, Toxicology, Physiology Biology
Google:
"Biny Joseph"
Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
 

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Nancy J. Rusch grad student 2009 UAMS
 (Loss of potassium ion channels in the cerebral circulation of hypertensive rats: Membrane associated proteins and myogenic tone.)
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Hill BJF, Dalton RJ, Joseph BK, et al. (2017) 17β-estradiol reduces Cav 1.2 channel abundance and attenuates Ca(2+) -dependent contractions in coronary arteries. Pharmacology Research & Perspectives. 5
Moore CL, McClenahan SJ, Hanvey HM, et al. (2015) Beta1-adrenergic receptor-mediated dilation of rat cerebral artery requires Shaker-type KV1 channels on PSD95 scaffold. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism : Official Journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Moore CL, McClenahan SJ, Hanvey HM, et al. (2015) Beta1-adrenergic receptor-mediated dilation of rat cerebral artery requires Shaker-type KV1 channels on PSD95 scaffold Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Joseph BK, Thakali KM, Moore CL, et al. (2013) Ion channel remodeling in vascular smooth muscle during hypertension: Implications for novel therapeutic approaches. Pharmacological Research. 70: 126-38
Joseph BK, Thakali KM, Pathan AR, et al. (2011) Postsynaptic density-95 scaffolding of Shaker-type K⁺ channels in smooth muscle cells regulates the diameter of cerebral arteries. The Journal of Physiology. 589: 5143-52
Tobin AA, Joseph BK, Al-Kindi HN, et al. (2009) Loss of cerebrovascular Shaker-type K(+) channels: a shared vasodilator defect of genetic and renal hypertensive rats. American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology. 297: H293-303
Bryan RM, Joseph BK, Lloyd E, et al. (2007) Starring TREK-1: the next generation of vascular K+ channels. Circulation Research. 101: 119-21
See more...