Katharina Braun's research while affiliated with Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg and other places

What is this page?


This page lists the scientific contributions of an author, who either does not have a ResearchGate profile, or has not yet added these contributions to their profile.

It was automatically created by ResearchGate to create a record of this author's body of work. We create such pages to advance our goal of creating and maintaining the most comprehensive scientific repository possible. In doing so, we process publicly available (personal) data relating to the author as a member of the scientific community.

If you're a ResearchGate member, you can follow this page to keep up with this author's work.

If you are this author, and you don't want us to display this page anymore, please let us know.

Publications (186)


Figure Legends Figure 1: (A) Schematic illustration of a coronal section indicating the nucleus accumbens (NAc) with subregions NAc Core and NAc Shell (modified after Paxinos and Watson, 1982); (B) photomicrograph of a medium sized spiny neuron in the NAc; inset shows a dendritic segment with dendritic spines; (C) schematic illustration of dendritic branching with numbers indicating individual branch orders ("natural" dendritic segments) D) schematic illustration of Sholl
Paternal Deprivation and Female Biparental Family Rearing Induce Dendritic and Synaptic Changes in Octodon degus: II. Nucleus Accumbens
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2023

·

77 Reads

·

2 Citations

Developmental Neuroscience

·

Katharina Braun

·

Joerg Bock

While the majority of studies on the importance of parental caregiving on offspring behavioral and brain development focus on the role of the mother, the paternal contribution is still an understudied topic. We investigated if growing up without paternal care affects dendritic and synaptic development in the nucleus accumbens of male and female offspring, and if replacement of the father by a female caregiver “compensates” the impact of paternal deprivation. We compared a) biparental rearing by father and mother b) mono-parental care by a single mother and c) biparental rearing by two female caregivers. Quantitative analysis of medium-sized neurons in the nucleus accumbens revealed that growing up without father resulted in reduced spine number in both male and female offspring in the core region, whereas spine frequency was only reduced in females. In the shell region reduced spine frequency was only found in males growing up in a monoparental environment. Replacement of the father by a female caregiver did not “protect” against the effects of paternal deprivation, indicating a critical impact of paternal care behavior on the development and maturation of neuronal networks in the nucleus accumbens.

Download
Share

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 2 ELS and FS effects on cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R) and fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) relative expression in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of adult female rats. Relative gene expression data are calculated and shown as 2 -DDCt values ± SD [CB1R results (A); FAAH results (B)]. Significant results of SNK post-hoc test are indicated as * p ≤ 0.05, * * p ≤ 0.01 and * * * p < 0.001. Pearson correlation analysis revealed a positive correlation between CB1R and FAAH expression, overal all groups (C). CON, control (n = 9); ELS, early life stress (n = 9); FS, forced swimming (n = 8); ELS + FS, early life stress + forced swimming, (n = 9).
FIGURE 3
FIGURE 6
CB1R primers used for DNA methylation.
Epigenetic (re)programming of gene expression changes of CB1R and FAAH in the medial prefrontal cortex in response to early life and adolescence stress exposure

February 2023

·

114 Reads

·

7 Citations

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

·

Anna Portugalov

·

Michal Dudai

·

[...]

·

Jörg Bock

Environmental factors, including stress, that are experienced during early life (ELS) or adolescence are potential risk factors for the development of behavioral and mental disorders later in life. The endocannabinoid system plays a major role in the regulation of stress responses and emotional behavior, thereby acting as a mediator of stress vulnerability and resilience. Among the critical factors, which determine the magnitude and direction of long-term consequences of stress exposure is age, i.e., the maturity of brain circuits during stress exposure. Thus, the present study addressed the hypotheses that ELS and adolescent stress differentially affect the expression of regulatory elements of the endocannabinoid system, cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R) and fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of adult female rats. We also tested the hypothesis that the proposed gene expression changes are epigenetically modulated via altered DNA-methylation. The specific aims were to investigate if (i) ELS and adolescent stress as single stressors induce changes in CB1R and FAAH expression (ii) ELS exposure influences the effect of adolescent stress on CB1R and FAAH expression, and (iii) if the proposed gene expression changes are paralleled by changes of DNA methylation. The following experimental groups were investigated: (1) non-stressed controls (CON), (2) ELS exposure (ELS), (3) adolescent stress exposure (forced swimming; FS), (4) ELS + FS exposure. We found an up-regulation of CB1R expression in both single-stressor groups and a reduction back to control levels in the ELS + FS group. An up-regulation of FAAH expression was found only in the FS group. The data indicate that ELS, i.e., stress during a very immature stage of brain development, exerts a buffering programming effect on gene expression changes induced by adolescent stress. The detected gene expression changes were accompanied by altered DNA methylation patterns in the promoter region of these genes, specifically, a negative correlation of mean CB1R DNA methylation with gene expression was found. Our results also indicate that ELS induces a long-term “(re)programming” effect, characterized by CpG-site specific changes within the promoter regions of the two genes that influence gene expression changes in response to FS at adolescence.


FIGURE 1 | Experimental design.
FIGURE 2 | Schematic depiction of the mouse Y2 receptor gene, including the positions of the 9 analyzed CpG sites and the transcription factor binding sites (blue: exon; dark red: core promoter; red: promoter bounds and flanking region). The sequences of the promoter region are shown as a forward strand (NCBI, Gene ID: 18167).
FIGURE 3 | Analysis of Y2 receptor gene expression after ELS and AS in the hippocampus of male and female animals. Significant results of post hoc test (SNK) are represented as *p ≤ 0.05. CON, control; ELS, early life stress; CON+AS, control + adult stress; ELS+AS, early life stress + adult stress.
FIGURE 6 | Changes of DNA-methylation (%) at analyzed CpG sites within the Y2 receptor gene promoter in male animals. The locations of CpG-sites were determined according to their distance from the start codon. Significant results of the post hoc test (SNK) are represented as *p ≤ 0.05. CON, control; ELS, early life stress; CON+AS, control + adult stress; ELS+AS, early life stress + adult stress.
Two-way ANOVA results for individual CpG site-specific DNA-methylation within the Y2 receptor gene promoter in male animals.
Early Life Stress-Induced Epigenetic Programming of Hippocampal NPY-Y2 Receptor Gene Expression Changes in Response to Adult Stress

July 2022

·

120 Reads

·

5 Citations

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

Early Life Stress (ELS) can critically influence brain development and future stress responses and thus represents an important risk factor for mental health and disease. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is discussed to be a key mediator of resilient vs. vulnerable adaptations and specifically, the NPY-Y2 receptor (Y2R) may be involved in the pathophysiology of depression due to its negative regulation of NPY-release. The present study addressed the hypotheses that ELS and adult stress (AS) affect the expression of hippocampal Y2R and that exposure to ELS induces an epigenetically mediated programming effect towards a consecutive stress exposure in adulthood. The specific aims were to investigate if (i) ELS or AS as single stressors induce changes in Y2 receptor gene expression in the hippocampus, (ii) the predicted Y2R changes are epigenetically mediated via promoter-specific DNA-methylation, (iii) the ELS-induced epigenetic changes exert a programming effect on Y2R gene expression changes in response to AS, and finally (iv) if the predicted alterations are sex-specific. Animals were assigned to the following experimental groups: (1) non-stressed controls (CON), (2) only ELS exposure (ELS), (3) only adult stress exposure (CON+AS), and (4) exposure to ELS followed by AS (ELS+AS). Using repeated maternal separation in mice as an ELS and swim stress as an AS we found that both stressors affected Y2R gene expression in the hippocampus of male mice but not in females. Specifically, upregulated expression was found in the CON+AS group. In addition, exposure to both stressors ELS+AS significantly reduced Y2R gene expression when compared to CON+AS. The changes in Y2R expression were paralleled by altered DNA-methylation patterns at the Y2R promoter, specifically, a decrease in mean DNA-methylation in the CON+AS males compared to the non-AS exposed groups and an increase in the ELS+AS males compared to the CON+AS males. Also, a strong negative correlation of mean DNA-methylation with Y2R expression was found. Detailed CpG-site-specific analysis Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | www.frontiersin.org 1 July 2022 | Volume 16 | Article 936979 Kocamaz et al. Stress-Induced NPY-Y2-Receptor Changes in Hippocampus of DNA-methylation revealed that ELS induced increased DNA-methylation only at specific CpG-sites within the Y2R promoter. It is tempting to speculate that these ELS-induced CpG-site-specific changes represent a "buffering" programming effect against elevations of Y2R expression induced by AS.


Experimental chambers for mice (upper) and degus (lower)
Mean time spent in the area with snake images and that with non-snake images. a Degus, b mice. The total testing time was 15 min for mice and 10 min for degus. Small bars indicate standard errors. *P < 0.10, **P < 0.05
Comparison of mice and degus. a Relative time spent in the area with non-snake images. b Percentage of individuals that exhibited more than 60% preference for the non-snake area. Small bars indicate standard errors. **P < 0.05, ***P<0/01
Principal component analysis (PCA) of stimuli. Left: analysis of color images; right: analysis of grey-scale images
Visual snake aversion in Octodon degus and C57BL/6 mice

February 2022

·

65 Reads

·

3 Citations

Animal Cognition

Phobia against spiders or snakes is common in humans, and similar phobia-like behaviors have been observed in non-human animals. Visual images of snakes elicit phobia in humans, but sensory modalities that cause snake aversion in non-human animals are not well examined. In this study, we examined visually induced snake aversion in two rodent species. Using a three-compartment experimental chamber, reactions to images of snakes were compared between the diurnal precocious rodent Octodon degus and nocturnal laboratory mice. The snakes whose images were presented do not live in the original habitats of degus or mice. Snake aversion was assessed by presenting snake vs. no-image, snake vs. flower, snake vs. degu, and snake vs. mouse images. The time spent in a compartment with the snake image and with the non-snake images were measured. Degus avoided images of snakes in every tests. In contrast, mice did not display snake aversion. Degus are diurnal animals, i.e., visual information is important for their survival. Since mice are nocturnal, visual information is less important for survival. Such behavioral differences in the two species may explain the difference in visually induced aversion to snakes. A principal component analysis of the stimulus images suggests that elementary cues, such as color, do not explain the differences in the species’ aversion to snakes. Finally, snake aversion in degus suggests that aversion is innate, since the animals were born and raised in a laboratory.


Figure 2. Development of TWA learning. During the first training day the animals mainly showed escape responses; with continuing training the number of avoidance responses increased.
Figure 3. Cont.
Figure 3. Statistically significant differences between spatial patterns of rCBF during acquisition and retrieval. Shown are maps (rostral to caudal) of normalized SPECT images of mean rCBF during acquisition and retrieval and statistically significant differences between both conditions (n = 10). All images are overlaid on anatomical reference MR images. Probability maps are shown with voxels at a significance level of 5% (p ≤ 0.05) and 1% (p ≤ 0.01), respectively. Voxels with significantly higher rCBF during retrieval as compared to acquisition are color-coded in red to yellow, voxels with higher rCBF during acquisition as compared to retrieval in blue to violet. The color scale for the normalized group mean flow is from 0 to 1.7 times the mean (µ) flow. The color scales for the p-maps range from p = 0.05 to p ≤ 0.001 corresponding to t-values of 2.262 to ≥4.781 for the 5% significance level and from p = 0.01 to p ≤ 0.001 corresponding to t-values of 3.250 to ≥4.781 for the 1% significance level. R, L: right or left hemisphere.
Figure 5. Hypothetical pathways compiled from imaging data during acquisition and during retrieval of TWA learning. Color coding: dark blue, sensory/motor cortex; light blue, subcortical regions; green, prefrontal cortical areas; dark red, limbic/MTL areas; light red, limbic output regions. For abbreviations, see list of abbreviations.
Imaging of Functional Brain Circuits during Acquisition and Memory Retrieval in an Aversive Feedback Learning Task: Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography of Regional Cerebral Blood Flow in Freely Behaving Rats

May 2021

·

87 Reads

Brain Sciences

Active avoidance learning is a complex form of aversive feedback learning that in humans and other animals is essential for actively coping with unpleasant, aversive, or dangerous situations. Since the functional circuits involved in two-way avoidance (TWA) learning have not yet been entirely identified, the aim of this study was to obtain an overall picture of the brain circuits that are involved in active avoidance learning. In order to obtain a longitudinal assessment of activation patterns in the brain of freely behaving rats during different stages of learning, we applied single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). We were able to identify distinct prefrontal cortical, sensory, and limbic circuits that were specifically recruited during the acquisition and retrieval phases of the two-way avoidance learning task.


Regions of interest in the prefrontal cortex are shown bilaterally (1—dorsolateral right, 2—dorsolateral left; 3—anterior cingulate dorsal right, 4—anterior cingulate dorsal left; 5—anterior cingulate ventral right, 6—anterior cingulate ventral left; 7—orbitofrontal right, 8—orbitofrontal left) at low magnification picture of the Nissl-myelin-stained coronal section at the level where investigations were carried out (scale bar 10 mm; the staining method is described in [67])
Reduced ribosomal DNA transcription in the prefrontal cortex of suicide victims: consistence of new molecular RT-qPCR findings with previous morphometric data from AgNOR-stained pyramidal neurons

January 2021

·

71 Reads

·

5 Citations

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience

Prefrontal cortical regions play a key role in behavioural regulation, which is profoundly disturbed in suicide. The study was carried out on frozen cortical samples from the anterior cingulate cortex (dorsal and ventral parts, ACd and ACv), the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), and the dorsolateral cortex (DLC) obtained from 20 suicide completers (predominantly violent) with unknown psychiatric diagnosis and 21 non-suicidal controls. The relative level of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as a marker of the transcriptional activity of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) was evaluated bilaterally in prefrontal regions mentioned above (i.e. in eight regions of interest, ROIs) by reverse transcription and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). The overall statistical analysis revealed a decrease in rDNA activity in suicide victims versus controls, particularly in male subjects. Further ROI-specific post hoc analyses revealed a significant decrease in this activity in suicides compared to non-suicides in five ROIs. This effect was accentuated in the ACv, where it was observed bilaterally. Our findings suggest that decreased rDNA transcription in the prefrontal cortex plays an important role in suicide pathogenesis and corresponds with our previous morphometric analyses of AgNOR-stained neurons.


Fig. 1 a Regions of interest in the prefrontal cortex are outlined bilaterally (1-dorsolateral right, 2-dorsolateral left; 3-anterior cingulate dorsal right, 4-anterior cingulate dorsal left; 5-anterior cingulate ventral right, 6-anterior cingulate ventral left; 7-orbitofrontal right, 8-orbitofrontal left) at low magnification picture of the Nissl-
a Regions of interest in the prefrontal cortex are outlined bilaterally (1—dorsolateral right, 2—dorsolateral left; 3—anterior cingulate dorsal right, 4—anterior cingulate dorsal left; 5—anterior cingulate ventral right, 6—anterior cingulate ventral left; 7—orbitofrontal right, 8—orbitofrontal left) at low magnification picture of the Nissl-myelin-stained coronal section at the level where investigations were carried out (scale bar 10 mm; the staining method is described in [33]). b After AgNOR staining the borders of the nucleus (N) and the AgNOR area (representing the nucleolus) (n) are clearly visible within prefrontal pyramidal neurons (scale bar 10 μm)
Ribosomal DNA transcription in prefrontal pyramidal neurons is decreased in suicide

October 2020

·

106 Reads

·

3 Citations

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience

Prefrontal cortical regions, which are crucial for the regulation of emotionally influenced behaviour, play most probably a dominant role in the pathogenesis of suicide. The study was carried out on paraffin-embedded brain tissue blocks containing specimens from the anterior cingulate cortex (dorsal and ventral parts), the orbitofrontal cortex, and the dorsolateral cortex obtained from 23 suicide completers (predominantly violent) with unknown psychiatric diagnosis and 25 non-suicidal controls. The transcriptional activity of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) as a surrogate marker of protein biosynthesis was evaluated separately in layers III and V pyramidal neurons in regions of interest (ROIs) mentioned above by the AgNOR silver staining method bilaterally. The overall statistical analysis revealed a decrease of AgNOR area suggestive of attenuated rDNA activity in suicide victims versus controls, particularly in male subjects. Further ROI-specific post-hoc analyses revealed decreases of the median AgNOR area in suicides compared to non-suicides in all 16 ROIs. However, this effect was only significant in the layer V pyramidal neurons of the right ventral anterior cingulate cortex. Our findings suggest that decreased rDNA transcription in prefrontal pyramidal neurons plays possibly an important role in suicide pathogenesis.


Paternal Deprivation and Female Biparental Family Rearing Induce Dendritic and Synaptic Changes in Octodon degus: I. Medial Prefrontal Cortex

September 2020

·

166 Reads

·

10 Citations

Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience

Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience

In most mammalian species parent-offspring interactions during early life periods primarily comprise social contacts with the mother, whereas the role of males in parental care is one of the most overlooked and understudied topics. The present study addressed the hypothesis that the complete deprivation of paternal care delays or permanently retards synaptic connectivity in the brain, particularly in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of the offspring in a sex-specific manner. Another aim of this study was to address the question whether and in which way replacing the father with a female caregiver (in our experiments the “aunt”) can “buffer” the detrimental effects of paternal deprivation on neuronal development. The comparison of: (a) single mother rearing; (b) biparental rearing by father and mother; and (c) biparental rearing by two female caregivers revealed that: (i) paternal care represents a critical environmental factor for synaptic and dendritic development of pyramidal neurons in the vmPFC of their offspring; (ii) a second female caregiver (“aunt”) does not “buffer” the neuronal consequences of paternal deprivation; and that (iii) neuronal development in the vmPFC is differentially affected in male and female offspring in response to different family constellations.


Maternal Separation Induces Long-Term Alterations in the Cardiac Oxytocin Receptor and Cystathionine γ -Lyase Expression in Mice

January 2020

·

165 Reads

·

19 Citations

We recently showed that blunt chest trauma reduced the expression of the myocardial oxytocin receptor (Oxtr), which was further aggravated by genetic deletion of the H2S-producing enzyme cystathionine γ-lyase (CSE). Exogenous H2S supplementation restored myocardial Oxtr expression under these conditions. Early life stress (ELS) is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease by affecting vascular and heart structures. Therefore, we tested the hypotheses that (i) ELS affects cardiac Oxtr and CSE expressions and (ii) Oxtr and CSE expression patterns depend on the duration of stress exposure. Thus, two stress paradigms were compared: long- and short-term separation stress (LTSS and STSS, respectively). Cardiac Oxtr expression was differentially affected by the two stress paradigms with a significant reduction after LTSS and a significant increase after STSS. CSE expression, which was significantly reduced in Oxtr-/- knockout hearts, was downregulated and directly related to Oxtr expression in LTSS hearts (r=0.657, p=0.012). In contrast, CSE expression was not related to Oxtr upregulation in STSS. Plasma Oxt levels were not affected by either ELS paradigm. The coincidence of LTSS-induced reduction of cardiac Oxtr and reduced CSE expression may suggest a novel pathophysiological link between early life adversities and increased risk for the development of cardiovascular disorders in adulthood.


ELA induces changes in DRD1 and DARPP-32 gene expression. a Short-term separation stress (STSS) induced an increase in DRD1 gene expression, whereas long-term separation stress (LTSS) had no effect on the expression of the DRD1 gene (*p ≤ 0.05). b STSS induced reduced gene expression of DARPP-32; in contrast, LTSS induced increased DARPP-32 expression (*p ≤ 0.05)
ELA-induced changes in histone acetylation. a STSS induced a reduction of H3 acetylation in the hippocampus, whereas LTSS had no effect (*p ≤ 0.05). b STSS resulted in reduced H3 acetylation at the promoter region of DARPP-32, whereas LTSS had no effect (*p ≤ 0.05). c, d Global H4 acetylation as well as DARPP-32 promoter-specific H4 acetylation was affected neither by STSS nor by LTSS
Early-Life Adversity Induces Epigenetically Regulated Changes in Hippocampal Dopaminergic Molecular Pathways

May 2019

·

450 Reads

·

21 Citations

Molecular Neurobiology

Early-life adversity (ELA) represents a major risk factor for the development of behavioral dysfunctions and mental disorders later in life. On the other hand, dependent on type, time point, and duration, ELA exposure can also induce adaptations, which result in better stress coping and resilience later in life. Guided by the hypothesis that chronic exposure to ELA results in dysfunctional brain and behavior, whereas short exposure to ELA may result in resilience, the behavioral and neurobiological consequences of long-term separation stress (LTSS) and short-term separation stress (STSS) were compared in a mouse model for ELA. In line with our hypothesis, we found that LTSS induced depressive-like behavior, whereas STSS reduced depressive-like behavioral symptoms. We then tested the hypothesis that the opposite behavioral outcomes of the two stress paradigms may be mediated by functional, epigenetically regulated changes of dopaminergic modulation in the hippocampal formation. We found that STSS exposure elevated dopamine receptor D1 (DRD1) gene expression and decreased gene expression of its downstream modulator DARPP-32 (32-kDa dopamine- and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein), which was paralleled by decreased H3 acetylation at its gene promoter region. In contrast, LTSS elevated DARPP-32 gene expression, which was not paralleled by changes in histone acetylation and DRD1 gene expression. These findings indicate that short- and long-term neonatal exposure to ELA induces changes in dopaminergic molecular pathways, some of which are epigenetically regulated and which either alleviate or aggravate depressive-like symptoms later in life.


Citations (84)


... 162 Indeed, PD in degu has been shown to have widespread effects on the number of neurons throughout the lifespan in many brain regions, including the NAc, amygdala, and hippocampus. [162][163][164] In mandarin voles and California mice, PD leads to reductions in the survival of new cells in the dentate gyrus of females. 105,165 PD in California mice has also been shown to lead to reductions in the volume of the dentate gyrus in both sexes and the density of microglia cells. ...

Reference:

Shaping the development of complex social behavior
Paternal Deprivation and Female Biparental Family Rearing Induce Dendritic and Synaptic Changes in Octodon degus: II. Nucleus Accumbens

Developmental Neuroscience

... However, there are also some similarities between the studies like increase of CB1 expression and receptor-stimulated [ 35 S]GTPγS binding in prefrontal cortex and hippocampus in the papers by Vinod et al. (2012) and Smaga et al. (2017a). In the paper by Demaili et al. (2023), CB1 expression was also increased in medial prefrontal cortex of animals subjected to either early life or adolescent stress; however, in the group subjected to both stress protocols, CB1 expression has been restored to the control levels. This finding suggests that exposition to early life stress in the period when central nervous system is still immature might result in re-programming of response to consecutive stressors in later life (Demaili et al. 2023). ...

Epigenetic (re)programming of gene expression changes of CB1R and FAAH in the medial prefrontal cortex in response to early life and adolescence stress exposure

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

... Epigenetic markings memorize past experiences, especially if they have a distressing impact, e.g., stress, perinatal stress, malnutrition (hunger), strong experiences of pain, child abuse, or the absence of a mother's care (Bartlett et al. 2017;Kocamaz et al. 2022;Hoffmann et al. 2023). All these may lead to epigenetic markings that may even be inherited and result in risks of mental or metabolic diseases in later generations (Szyf 2021;Nilsson et al. 2022;Juruena 2023). ...

Early Life Stress-Induced Epigenetic Programming of Hippocampal NPY-Y2 Receptor Gene Expression Changes in Response to Adult Stress

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

... obs.), but also shed rattlesnake skin within 2 m since they will chew it and lick their fur as a possible deceptive defense against other predators (Clucas et al., 2008). As in ground squirrels, innate visual recognition of snakes is evident in laboratory born Chilean rodents (Octodon degus) that avoided a chamber with snake pictures (Watanabe et al., 2021). ...

Visual snake aversion in Octodon degus and C57BL/6 mice

Animal Cognition

... While lithium was reported to reduce ribosomal gene expression and protein synthesis, the role of these pathways in the mechanism of action of lithium remains unclear (Z. S. J. Liu et al., 2022). Decreased ribosomal RNA activity was also observed in people dying by suicide, suggesting that ribosomal abnormalities were associated to suicidal behaviour rather than BD, especially in postmortem brain samples (Krzyżanowska et al., 2021). ...

Reduced ribosomal DNA transcription in the prefrontal cortex of suicide victims: consistence of new molecular RT-qPCR findings with previous morphometric data from AgNOR-stained pyramidal neurons

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience

... Region-specific analyses within the frontal cortex and hippocampus may be warranted when assessing proinflammatory cytokine concentrations. Paternal deprivation induces more significant alterations in functional and structural plasticity in the medial prefrontal cortex of adult females than males (Bambico et al. 2015;de Schultz et al. 2020)-an effect that was not rescued by replacing the paternal rodent with a second female caregiver (de Schultz et al. 2020). This suggests that the paternal rodent may be necessary for proper development of the medial prefrontal cortex in adult female offspring. ...

Paternal Deprivation and Female Biparental Family Rearing Induce Dendritic and Synaptic Changes in Octodon degus: I. Medial Prefrontal Cortex
Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience

Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience

... Jankowski et al. (2004) announced that they showed OTR in endothelial cells of rat hearts at the 21 st day of embryonic development and at the 1 st postnatal day in their study related to development ontogeny. Wigger et al. (2004) reported that OTR was shown in the heart muscles, and in vessel wall and endothelial cells (31). Merz et al. (2020) showed OTR immunoreactivity in heart tissue (32). ...

Maternal Separation Induces Long-Term Alterations in the Cardiac Oxytocin Receptor and Cystathionine γ -Lyase Expression in Mice
Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity

Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity

... Limbic regions of prefrontal cortex (PFC), i.e. the anterior cingulate cortex (AC) and the orbitofrontal cortex play a key regulatory role in emotionally influenced behaviour and their abnormalities are consistently reported in depression and suicide [10,[16][17][18]. Experimental research on animal models of depression suggests an involvement of disturbed prefrontal CS activity in the pathogenesis of this mental disorder [19,20], which is frequently comorbid with suicide [10,16]. ...

Ribosomal DNA transcription in prefrontal pyramidal neurons is decreased in suicide

European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience

... 201 In animal models, long-lasting effects of ELS have been documented. [202][203][204][205][206][207] ELS increased the vulnerability to adult stress in rodents 208 . ELS may not cause immediate behavioral abnormalities but instead causes longlasting transcriptional alterations that prime critical brain regions to be hyper-responsive to later stress and prone to develop a depression-like state. ...

Early-Life Adversity Induces Epigenetically Regulated Changes in Hippocampal Dopaminergic Molecular Pathways

Molecular Neurobiology

... anxiety) during both pregnancy and early maternal care (e.g. Schmidt et al. 2018). Hence, maternally transmitted trans-generational effects require the study of gametic modifications as well as the study of effects that are mediated through multiple somatic reconstruction mechanisms (McGowan 2022). ...

Maternal stress during pregnancy induces depressive-like behavior only in female offspring and correlates to their hippocampal Avp and Oxt receptor expression
  • Citing Article
  • June 2018

Behavioural Brain Research