Publications of P. Gormanns
All genres
Journal Article (12)
1.
Journal Article
7 (2), e30576 (2012)
Segmentation of Multi-Isotope Imaging Mass Spectrometry Data for Semi-Automatic Detection of Regions of Interest. PLoS ONE 2.
Journal Article
70 (11), pp. 1074 - 1082 (2011)
Proteomics and Metabolomics Analysis of a Trait Anxiety Mouse Model Reveals Divergent Mitochondrial Pathways. Biological Psychiatry 3.
Journal Article
1, e58 (2011)
Metabolite profiling of antidepressant drug action reveals novel drug targets beyond monoamine elevation. Translational Psychiatry 4.
Journal Article
10 (12), doi: 10.1074/mcp.M111.008110 (2011)
Proteomic and Metabolomic Profiling of a Trait Anxiety Mouse Model Implicate Affected Pathways. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 5.
Journal Article
44 (6), p. 289 - 289 (2011)
Anxiety and mitochondria: Insights from the -omics world. Pharmacopsychiatry 6.
Journal Article
45 (7), pp. 973 - 979 (2011)
Phenome-transcriptome correlation unravels anxiety and depression related pathways. Journal of Psychiatric Research 7.
Journal Article
21 (Suppl. 2), pp. S110 - S111 (2011)
Biomarkers for anxiety disorders: proteomic and systems biology approaches. European Neuropsychopharmacology 8.
Journal Article
83 (5), pp. 1665 - 1672 (2011)
Proteome Scale Turnover Analysis in Live Animals Using Stable Isotope Metabolic Labeling. Analytical Chemistry 9.
Journal Article
44 (16), pp. 1176 - 1189 (2010)
Proteome analysis of the thalamus and cerebrospinal fluid reveals glycolysis dysfunction and potential biomarkers candidates for schizophrenia. Journal of Psychiatric Research 10.
Journal Article
11 (2), pp. 110 - 120 (2010)
Proteome analysis of schizophrenia brain tissue. World Journal of Biological Psychiatry 11.
Journal Article
44, pp. 1176 - 1189 (2010)
Proteome analysis of the thalamus and cerebrospinal fluid reveals glycolysis dysfinction and potential biomarkers candidates for schizophrenia. Journal of Psychiatric Research 12.
Journal Article
41 (Suppl. 1), pp. S70 - S77 (2008)
Psychiatric disorders biomarker identification: from proteomics to systems biology. Pharmacopsychiatry