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Chronic Stress

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chronic stress

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with chronic stress across World Wide.
14 curated items9 ePosters5 Seminars
Updated over 3 years ago
14 items · chronic stress
14 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Reversing chronic stress effects through life-style interventions

PD Olivia Engmann, PhD
Friedrich-Schiller University Jena
Mar 22, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Stress deceleration theory: chronic adolescent stress exposure results in decelerated neurobehavioral maturation

Kshitij Jadhav
University of Cambridge
Jan 18, 2022

Normative development in adolescence indicates that the prefrontal cortex is still under development thereby unable to exert efficient top-down inhibitory control on subcortical regions such as the basolateral amygdala and the nucleus accumbens. This imbalance in the developmental trajectory between cortical and subcortical regions is implicated in expression of the prototypical impulsive, compulsive, reward seeking and risk-taking adolescent behavior. Here we demonstrate that a chronic mild unpredictable stress procedure during adolescence in male Wistar rats arrests the normal behavioral maturation such that they continue to express adolescent-like impulsive, hyperactive, and compulsive behaviors into late adulthood. This arrest in behavioral maturation is associated with the hypoexcitability of prelimbic cortex (PLC) pyramidal neurons and reduced PLC-mediated synaptic glutamatergic control of BLA and nucleus accumbens core (NAcC) neurons that lasts late into adulthood. At the same time stress exposure in adolescence results in the hyperexcitability of the BLA pyramidal neurons sending stronger glutamatergic projections to the NAcC. Chemogenetic reversal of the PLC hypoexcitability decreased compulsivity and improved the expression of goal-directed behavior in rats exposed to stress during adolescence, suggesting a causal role for PLC hypoexcitability in this stress-induced arrested behavioral development. (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.21.469381v1.abstract)

SeminarNeuroscience

Sex-Specific Brain Transcriptional Signatures in Human MDD and their Correlates in Mouse Models of Depression

Benoit Labonté
Université Laval & Centre de Recherche CERVO, Québec, Canada
Feb 11, 2021

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a sexually dimorphic disease. This sexual dimorphism is believed to result from sex-specific molecular alterations affecting functional pathways regulating the capacity of men and women to cope with daily life stress differently. Transcriptional changes associated with epigenetic alterations have been observed in the brain of men and women with depression and similar changes have been reported in different animal models of stress-induced depressive-like behaviors. In fact, most of our knowledge of the biological basis of MDD is derived from studies of chronic stress models in rodents. However, while these models capture certain aspects of the features of MDD, the extent to which they reproduce the molecular pathology of the human syndrome remains unknown and the functional consequences of these changes on the neuronal networks controlling stress responses are poorly understood. During this presentation, we will first address the extent by which transcriptional signatures associated with MDD compares in men and women. We will then transition to the capacity of different mouse models of chronic stress to recapitulate some of the transcriptional alterations associated with the expression of MDD in both sexes. Finally, we will briefly elaborate on the functional consequences of these changes at the neuronal level and conclude with an integrative perspective on the contribution of sex-specific transcriptional profiles on the expression of stress responses and MDD in men and women.

SeminarNeuroscience

Reward processing in psychosis: adding meanings to the findings

Suzana Kazanova
Neuroscience, Research Group Psychiatry, Center for Contextual Psychiatry, University of Leuven, Belgium
Dec 7, 2020

Much of our daily behavior is driven by rewards. The ability to learn to pursue rewarding experiences is, in fact, an essential metric of mental health. Conversely, reduced capacity to engage in adaptive goal-oriented behavior is the hallmark of apathy, and present in the psychotic disorder. The search for its underlying mechanisms has resulted in findings of profound impairments in learning from rewards and the associated blunted activation in key reward areas of the brain of patients with psychosis. An emerging research field has been relying on digital phenotyping tools and ecological momentary assessments (EMA) that map patients’ current mood, behavior and context in the flow of their daily lives. Using these tools, we have started to see a different picture of apathy, one that is exquisitely driven by the environment. For one, reward sensitivity appears to be blunted by stressors, and exposure to undue chronic stress in the daily life may result in apathy in those predisposed to psychosis. Secondly, even patients with psychosis who exhibit clinically elevated levels of apathy are perfectly capable of seeking out and enjoying social interactions in their daily life, if their environment allows them to do so. The use of digital phenotyping tools in combination with neuroimaging of apathy not only allows us to add meanings to the neurobiological findings, but could also help design rational interventions.

ePoster

Behavioral, molecular and cellular effects of low-dose CBD administration in a chronic stress-induced major depression mouse model

Sara Borràs Pernas, Anna Sancho-Balsells, Daniel Del Toro, Albert Giralt

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Behavioural control training promotes antidepressant/anxiolytic-like reversal of chronic stress-induced behavioural deficits: Endocannabinoidergic and prolactinergic mechanisms

Francis Bambico, Andrew MacPherson, Tadhg Strand, Gavin Afonso, Courtney Clarke, Shannon Waye, Nageeb Hasan, Caio Oliveira, Matheus Cravatti, Jose Nobrega

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Beyond maternal boundaries: Exploring offspring excitability in response to maternal chronic stress and mirtazapine

Alžbeta Idunková, Lucia Dubiel-Hoppanová, Katarína Ondáčová, Matúš Tomko, Bohumila Jurkovičová-Tarabová, Stanislava Bukatová, Michal Dubovický, Ľubica Lacinová

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Impact of chronic stress and cortisol on hippocampal neuroplasticity: Implications for depression

Joseph Serrano, Kathleen Hegadoren, Nikolai Malykhin

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Long-term (intergenerational) effects of chronic stress on mouse behavior and its interaction with the circadian gene regulation in the hippocampus

Vincent Fischer, Miriam Kretschmer, Iryna Ivanova, Philipp Kohling, Pierre-Luc Germain, Katharina Gapp

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

A novel property of rice bran: Rice bran extract improves chronic stress-induced depression and anxiety-like behaviors in mice

Minji Kim, Minseok Yoon, Suengmok Cho, Min Young Um

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

A novel role for LSD1 splicing modulation in homeostatic adaptation to chronic stress

Arteda Paplekaj, Chiara Forastieri, Elena Romito, Andrea de Donato, Sara Testa, Emanuela Toffolo, Elena Battaglioli, Francesco Rusconi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Role of the serotonergic dorsal raphe nucleus in mediating the effects of developmental chronic stress in zebrafish

Zoltan Kristof Varga, Lucia Jimenez-Fernandez, Archana Golla, Florence Kermen

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Single-cell transcriptomic profiles of the ventral hippocampus in response to prolonged chronic stress and antidepressant action

Benedetta Bigio, Shofiul Azam, Neelu John, Yotam Sagi, Chaitan Khosla, Carla Nasca

FENS Forum 2024