Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein: GFAP-Thirty-One Years (1969–2000)Lawrence F. Eng(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Roopa S. Ghirnikar(Stanford University), Yuen L. Lee(Stanford University)Neurochemical ResearchOctober 1, 200010.1023/a:1007677003387Cited by 1,375SaveCiteExport RISWatch citationsAbstractRelated PapersLeukocyte Infiltration, Neuronal Degeneration, and Neurite Outgrowth after Ablation of Scar-Forming, Reactive Astrocytes in Adult Transgenic MiceToby G. Bush, Narman Puvanachandra, Catherine H. Horner et al.|Neuron|1999|1.1kGFAP and AstrogliosisLawrence F. Eng, Roopa S. Ghirnikar|Brain Pathology|1994|849The development of the pathologic changes of Alzheimer's disease and senile dementia in patients with Down's syndrome.P. C. Burger, F. Stephen Vogel|PubMed|1973|344Diffuse senile plaques occur commonly in the cerebellum in Alzheimer's disease.Catharine Joachim, James H. Morris, Dennis J. Selkoe|PubMed|1989|338Mice lacking glial fibrillary acidic protein display astrocytes devoid of intermediate filaments but develop and reproduce normally.Milos Pekny, P. Levéen, Marcela Pekna et al.|The EMBO Journal|1995|335