Time perception is a fundamental cognitive function essential for adaptive behavior and shared across species. The neural mechanisms underlying time perception, particularly its neuromodulation, remain debated. In this review, we examined the role of the serotonergic system in time perception (at the scale of seconds and minutes), building a translational bridge between human and non-human animal studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy or epileptic syndromes affect more than 70 million people, often comorbid with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Seizures are concerned as a factor for social regression in ASD. A stepwise experimental approach to this problem requires an animal model to provoke seizures and monitor subsequent behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is well known that neonatal pro-inflammatory challenge (NPC) acquire a predisposition to the development of a number of neuropsychiatric diseases: depression, anxiety disorders, autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Symptoms of these diseases can manifest themselves in adulthood and adolescent after repeated exposure to negative influences. Preventing the development of the negative consequences of NPC is one of the main tasks for researchers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGoal of the current work was to conduct comparative analysis of the effects of acute and chronic lipopolysaccharide-induced stress on the behavior of rats in the Morris water maze test and on expression of mRNA of proinflammatory cytokines and BDNF in different brain structures. Relevance of this study is related to poor understanding of the effects of acute and chronic stress on manifestation of cognitive brain functions, as well as ambiguity of the literature data on the effects of both stresses on hypothalamic pituitary axis and expression of the proinflammatory cytokine genes. In the experiments with rats, acute lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced stress improved learning in the Morris water maze.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Behav Physiol
September 2022
This review describes the role of social isolation in the development of anxiety and depression-like behavior in rodents. The duration of social isolation, age from onset of social isolation, sex, species, and strain of animals, the nature of the model used, and other factors have been shown to have influences. The molecular-cellular mechanisms of development of anxiety and depression-like behavior under the influence of social isolation and the roles of the HHAS, oxidative and nitrosative stress, neuroinflammation, BDNF, neurogenesis, synaptic plasticity, as well as monoamines in these mechanisms are discussed.
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