No abstract available
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August 2022 (v1)Journal articleUploaded on: December 4, 2022
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August 2022 (v1)Journal article
Abstract There are about twice as many women as men who experience depression during their lifetime. Although life circumstances and especially exposure to stressful situations constitute a major risk factor to develop depression, the underlying mechanisms have yet to be unraveled. We employed the chronic social defeat procedure to elicit...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 2021 (v1)Journal article
Stress has been acknowledged as one of the main risk factors for the onset of psychiatric disorders. Social stress is the most common type of stressor encountered in our daily lives. Uncovering the molecular determinants of the effect of stress on the brain would help understanding the complex maladaptations that contribute to pathological...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
December 2018 (v1)Journal article
Stressful life events are primary environmental factors that markedly contribute to depression by triggering brain cellular maladaptations. Dysregulation of ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopamine neurons has been causally linked to the appearance of social withdrawal and anhedonia, two classical manifestations of depression. However, the...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
December 14, 2021 (v1)Journal article
Drug addiction is defined as a compulsive pattern of drug-seeking- and taking- behavior, with recurrent episodes of abstinence and relapse, and a loss of control despite negative consequences. Addictive drugs promote reinforcement by increasing dopamine in the mesocorticolimbic system, which alters excitatory glutamate transmission within the...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
2022 (v1)Journal article
Freezing is a conserved defensive behaviour that constitutes a major stress-coping mechanism. Decades of research have demonstrated a role of the amygdala, periaqueductal grey and hypothalamus as core actuators of the control of fear responses, including freezing. However, the role that other modulatory sites provide to this hardwired scaffold...
Uploaded on: August 14, 2024 -
February 12, 2014 (v1)Journal article
The meso-cortico-limbic system, via dopamine release, encodes the rewarding and reinforcing properties of natural rewards. It is also activated in response to abused substances and is believed to support drug-related behaviors. Dysfunctions of this system lead to several psychiatric conditions including feeding disorders and drug addiction....
Uploaded on: February 28, 2023 -
October 2018 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
November 4, 2022 (v1)Publication
Abstract The rules leading to the emergence of a social organization and the role of social hierarchy on normal and pathological behaviours remain elusive. Here we show that groups of four isogenic male mice rapidly form enduring social ranks in a dominance hierarchy. Highest ranked individuals display enhanced anxiety and working memory, are...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
July 8, 2021 (v1)Journal article
Background: Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are associated with dysregulation of the microbiota-gut-brain axis, changes in microbiota composition as well as in the fecal, serum, and urine levels of microbial metabolites. Yet a causal relationship between dysregulation of the microbiota-gut-brain axis and ASD remains to be demonstrated. Here, we...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 2009 (v1)Journal articleStress and addiction: glucocorticoid receptor in dopaminoceptive neurons facilitates cocaine seeking
International audience
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
October 8, 2019 (v1)Journal article
There is a growing consensus that Alzheimer's disease (AD) involves failure of the homeostatic machinery, which underlies the firing stability of neural circuits. What are the culprits leading to neuron firing instability? The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is central to AD pathogenesis, and we recently showed that its intracellular domain...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
April 2022 (v1)Journal article
Enduring behavioral changes upon stress exposure involve changes in gene expression sustained by epigenetic modifications in brain circuits, including the mesocorticolimbic pathway. Brahma (BRM) and Brahma Related Gene 1 (BRG1) are ATPase subunits of the SWI/SNF complexes involved in chromatin remodeling, a process essential to enduring plastic...
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
April 2022 (v1)Journal article
Enduring behavioral changes upon stress exposure involve changes in gene expression sustained by epigenetic modifications in brain circuits, including the mesocorticolimbic pathway. Brahma (BRM) and Brahma Related Gene 1 (BRG1) are ATPase subunits of the SWI/SNF complexes involved in chromatin remodeling, a process essential to enduring plastic...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
November 16, 2021 (v1)Publication
Stress exposure is a cardinal risk factor for most psychiatric diseases. Preclinical and clinical studies point to changes in gene expression involving epigenetic modifications within mesocorticolimbic brain circuits. Brahma (BRM) and Brahma-Related-Gene-1 (BRG1) are ATPase subunits of the SWI/SNF complexes involved in chromatin remodeling, a...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
2024 (v1)Journal article
How nicotine acts on developing neurocircuitry in adolescence to promote later addiction vulnerability remains largely unknown, but may hold the key for informing more effective intervention efforts. We found transient nicotine exposure in early adolescent (PND 21-28) male mice was sufficient to produce a marked vulnerability to nicotine in...
Uploaded on: October 30, 2024 -
October 2023 (v1)Journal article
No description
Uploaded on: November 25, 2023 -
October 2023 (v1)Journal article
BackgroundSocial status in human, generally reflected by socioeconomic status, has been associated, when constrained, with heightened vulnerability to pathologies including psychiatric diseases. Social hierarchy in mice translates into individual and interdependent behavioral strategies of animals within a group. The rules leading to the...
Uploaded on: December 7, 2023 -
October 22, 2021 (v1)Journal article
Addictive drugs increase dopamine in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), where it persistently shapes excitatory glutamate transmission and hijacks natural reward processing. Here, we provide evidence, from mice to humans, that an underlying mechanism relies on drug-evoked heteromerization of glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) with...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
October 20, 2021 (v1)Journal article
Addictive drugs increase dopamine in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), where it persistently shapes excitatory glutamate transmission and hijacks natural reward processing. Here, we provide evidence, from mice to humans, that an underlying mechanism relies on drug-evoked heteromerization of glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) with...
Uploaded on: February 22, 2023 -
October 20, 2021 (v1)Journal article
Addictive drugs increase dopamine in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), where it persistently shapes excitatory glutamate transmission and hijacks natural reward processing. Here, we provide evidence, from mice to humans, that an underlying mechanism relies on drug-evoked heteromerization of glutamate N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) with...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022