Publications by authors named "Natalia Dyuzhikova"

The maintenance of genome stability is critical for health, but during individual ontogenesis, different stressors affect DNA integrity, which can lead to functional and/or structural changes in the cells of target organs. In the nervous system, cell genome destabilization is associated with different neurological and psychiatric diseases, but experiments in vivo, where a link between stress and DNA instability has been demonstrated, are relatively rare. Here, we use rat strains selected for the contrast excitability of the tibialis nerve () and nonselected Wistar rats to investigate the reasons for individual differences in developing post-stress pathologies.

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Article Synopsis
  • The gut-brain axis is a crucial communication network between the gastrointestinal tract and the central nervous system, significantly influenced by gut microbiota.
  • A study examined how stress affects the gut microbiome in two rat strains with different nervous system sensitivities, finding distinct changes in microbial diversity, especially an increase of certain beneficial bacteria in one strain under stress.
  • The results suggest that genetic differences in nervous system excitability impact gut microbiome composition during stress, highlighting the need for further research to explore these interactions and their potential effects on stress-related disorders.
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We evaluated copy number variation (CNV) for four genes in rat strains differing in nervous system excitability. rpl13a copy number is significantly reduced in hippocampus and bone marrow in rats with a high excitability threshold and stress. The observed phenomenon may be associated with a role for rpl13a in lipid metabolism.

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Acetylation of nucleosome histones results in relaxation of DNA and its availability for the transcriptional regulators, and is generally associated with the enhancement of gene expression. Although it is well known that activation of a variety of pro-adaptive genes represents a key event in the development of brain hypoxic/ischemic tolerance, the role of epigenetic mechanisms, in particular histone acetylation, in this process is still unexplored. The aim of the present study was to investigate changes in acetylation of histones in vulnerable brain neurons using original well-standardized model of hypobaric hypoxia and preconditioning-induced tolerance of the brain.

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