27 results match your criteria: "The California National Primate Research Center[Affiliation]"

Previous studies have demonstrated that tenofovir (9-[2-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]adenine; PMPA) treatment is usually very effective in suppressing viremia in macaques infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). The present study focuses on a subset of infant macaques that were chronically infected with highly virulent SIVmac251, and for which prolonged tenofovir treatment failed to significantly suppress viral RNA levels in plasma despite the presence of tenofovirsusceptible virus at the onset of therapy. While untreated animals with similarly high viremia developed fatal immunodeficiency within 3-6 months, these tenofovir-treated animals had significantly improved survival (up to 3.

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The amygdala, social behavior, and danger detection.

Ann N Y Acad Sci

December 2003

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Center for Neuroscience, The California National Primate Research Center, University of California-Davis, Davis, California 95616, USA.

The amygdala is a distinctive portion of the anterior temporal lobe that has been implicated in a variety of functions including expression of fear, modulation of memory, and mediation of social communication. While work on the rodent amygdala often deals with emotion, much of the research in nonhuman primates and in man deals with its role in the perception of social signals, such as facial expressions, and the maintenance of social position, such as in primate dominance hierarchies. We have established a program of research that has as its major goal the definition of neural systems that underlie species-typical social communication.

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