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by Mark A Gillman

LETTERS

Discovery of Gasotransmission


The Scientist 2004, 18(20):10

Published 25 October 2004

The Scientist, among many other sources, appears unaware of the original discovery of gasotransmission.[1] Almost 10 years before Solomon Snyder's group demonstrated that nitric oxide (NO) was involved in gaseous neurotransmission, researchers in South Africa provided evidence for a role for nitrous oxide (N2O).[2] This work was confirmed by workers in 1989.[3]


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