When laboratory mice suffer brain damage, e.g. from an injection, research group leader Jan Deussing has observed that a certain type of cell always appears and is activated in the immediate vicinity ...
A new study published in PNAS offers evidence that certain brain cells involved in regulating stress do not simply respond to threats, but operate on a repeating internal rhythm—roughly once every ...
• Injuries to the brain of laboratory mice activate oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), which are responsible for forming the myelin sheath. • Activated OPCs produce the stress hormone ...
Stress is not simply a response to acute stressful episodes. It occurs in the brain where a natural rhythmic pattern regulates the stress system of our body, even on a calm day. This rhythmic pattern ...
University of Otago – Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka-led research has found stress-controlling brain cells switch on and off in a steady rhythm about once every hour – even when nothing stressful is happening.
Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka-led research has found stress-controlling brain cells switch on and off in a steady rhythm about once every hour – even when nothing stressful is happening. Senior author ...
When laboratory mice suffer brain damage, e.g. from an injection, research group leader Jan Deussing has observed that a certain type of cell always appears and is activated in the immediate vicinity ...
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