^Danielson TJ, Boulton AA, Robertson HA (December 1977). "m-Octopamine, p-octopamine and phenylethanolamine in rat brain: a sensitive, specific assay and the effects of some drugs". Journal of Neurochemistry. 29 (6): 1131–1135.
doi:
10.1111/j.1471-4159.1977.tb06519.x.
PMID340613.
S2CID26137006.
† References for all endogenous human TAAR1 ligands are provided at
List of trace amines
‡ References for synthetic TAAR1 agonists can be found at
TAAR1 or in the associated compound articles. For TAAR2 and TAAR5 agonists and inverse agonists, see
TAAR for references.
^Danielson TJ, Boulton AA, Robertson HA (December 1977). "m-Octopamine, p-octopamine and phenylethanolamine in rat brain: a sensitive, specific assay and the effects of some drugs". Journal of Neurochemistry. 29 (6): 1131–1135.
doi:
10.1111/j.1471-4159.1977.tb06519.x.
PMID340613.
S2CID26137006.
† References for all endogenous human TAAR1 ligands are provided at
List of trace amines
‡ References for synthetic TAAR1 agonists can be found at
TAAR1 or in the associated compound articles. For TAAR2 and TAAR5 agonists and inverse agonists, see
TAAR for references.