Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
  • UQ Home
  • Contacts
  • Study
  • Maps
  • News
  • Events
  • Library
  • Give now
  • my.UQ
The University of Queensland
Queensland Brain Institute Queensland Brain Institute
Site search
Site search
Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Vision statement
    • Annual reports
  • Our people
    • Research leaders
    • Early and mid-career researchers
    • Equity, diversity and inclusion
  • Research
    • Research groups
    • Facilities
    • Centres
    • Partnerships
    • Publications
  • Study
    • PhD
    • MPhil
    • Honours
    • Research programs
    • Projects for coursework
    • Non-UQ students
  • The Brain
    • Brain anatomy
    • Brain functions
      • Action potentials and synapses
      • Adult neurogenesis
      • What is neurogenesis?
      • What is synaptic plasticity?
      • Studying synaptic plasticity and learning
      • How do neurons work?
      • Long-term synaptic plasticity
      • Vision
      • Visual perception
      • Attention: interference and control
      • How to measure brain activity in animals
      • How to measure brain activity in people
      • What are neurotransmitters?
      • What is deep-brain stimulation?
    • Diseases and disorders
    • Concussion
    • Learning & Memory
    • Dementia
    • The BRAIN magazine
    • Discovery science
    • Download free posters
  • Engage
    • Events
    • Donate
    • Support our research
    • Volunteer for a study
    • Talks and tours
    • Australian Brain Bee
    • Newsletters
  • News
    • Features
    • Podcasts
      • Podcast: autism and genetics
      • Podcast: International Women's Day
      • Podcast: fish eyes the window to the brain
      • Podcast: mysteries of the corpus callosum
      • Podcast: the most aggressive cancer in the brain
      • Podcast: using brain imaging to diagnose mental illness
      • Podcast: curing schizophrenia, from lab to clinic
      • Podcast: using deep brain stimulation treat Parkinson’s disease
      • Podcast: coral bleaching in the Great Barrier Reef
      • Podcast: the curious link between vitamin D and schizophrenia
      • Podcast: the neuroscience of racism
      • Podcast: Alzheimer's disease, a family perspective
      • Podcast: will nerve regeneration treat spinal cord injury?
      • Podcast: how I survived a stroke at 31
    • Meet our researchers
  • Contact

Ms Justine Haddrill

Research Technician/ Lab Manager
Queensland Brain Institute
j.haddrill@uq.edu.au

Publications

Journal Articles (8)
Conference Papers (3)

Journal Articles

Shan, Q., Nevin, S. T., Haddrill, J. L. and Lynch, J. W. (2003). Asymmetric contribution of α and β subunits to the activation of αβ heteromeric glycine receptors. Journal of Neurochemistry, 86 (2), 498-507. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2003.01872.x
Nevin, S. T., Cromer, B. A., Haddrill, J. L., Morton, C. J., Parker, M. W. and Lynch, J. W. (2003). Insights into the structural basis for zinc inhibition of the glycine receptor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278 (31 August 1), 28985-28992. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M300097200
Shan, Qiang, Haddrill, Justine L. and Lynch, Joseph W. (2002). Comparative surface accessibility of a pore-lining threonine residue (T6') in the glycine and GABA(A) receptors. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277 (47), 44845-44853. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M208647200
Han, Nian-Lin R., Haddrill, Justine L. and Lynch, Joseph W. (2001). Characterization of a glycine receptor domain that controls the binding and gating mechanisms of the beta-amino acid agonist, taurine. Journal of Neurochemistry, 79 (3), 636-647. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2001.00601.x
Shan, Q., Haddrill, J. L. and Lynch, J. W. (2001). Ivermectin, an unconventional agonist of the glycine receptor chloride channel. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276 (16), 12556-12564. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M011264200
Lynch, J. W., Han, N. L. R., Haddrill, J., Pierce, K. D. and Schofield, P. R. (2001). The surface accessibility of the glycine receptor M2-M3 loop is increased in the channel open state. Journal of Neuroscience, 21 (8), 2589-2599. doi: 10.1523/jneurosci.21-08-02589.2001
Shan, Q., Haddrill, J. L. and Lynch, J. W. (2001). A single beta subunit M2 domain residue controls the picrotoxin sensitivity of alpha beta heteromeric glycine receptor chloride channels. Journal of Neurochemistry, 76 (4), 1109-1120. doi: 10.1046/j.1471-4159.2001.00124.x
Nevin, Simon T., Haddrill, Justine L. and Lynch, Joseph W. (2000). A pore-lining glutamic acid in the rat olfactory cyclic nucleotide-gated channel controls external spermine block. Neuroscience Letters, 296 (2-3), 163-167. doi: 10.1016/S0304-3940(00)01650-5

Conference Papers

Lynch, Joseph W., Shan, Qiang and Haddrill, Justine (2003). Comparative surface accessibility of a pore-lining threonine residue (T6') in the glycine and GABA(A) receptors. 47th Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society, San Antonio, Texas, USA, 1-5 March, 2003. Bethesda, MD: Biophysical Society.
Han, N., Haddrill, J. L. and Lynch, J. W. (2001). Characterisation of a putative antagonist binding domain in the glycine receptor chloride channel. 21st Annual Meeting of the Australian Neuroscience Society, Brisbane, 28-31 January 2001. Sydney: ANS.
Nevin, S., Haddrill, J. L. and Lynch, J. W. (2001). A pore-lining glutamic acid in the olfactory cyclic nucleotide-gated channel controls external spermine block. 21st Annual Meeting of the Australian Neuroscience Society, Brisbane, Australia, 28-31 January, 2001. Sydney, N.S.W., Australia: ANS.
© The University of Queensland
Enquiries: +61 7 3365 1111   |   Contact directory
ABN: 63 942 912 684   |   CRICOS Provider No: 00025B
Emergency
Phone: 3365 3333
Privacy & Terms of use   |   Feedback   |   Updated: 29 Jun 2022
Login