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Natalya P. Bondar

Researcher at Russian Academy of Sciences

Publications -  20
Citations -  383

Natalya P. Bondar is an academic researcher from Russian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social defeat & Midbrain Raphe Nuclei. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 20 publications receiving 296 citations. Previous affiliations of Natalya P. Bondar include Novosibirsk State University.

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Stress early in life leads to cognitive impairments, reduced numbers of CA3 neurons and altered maternal behavior in adult female mice.

TL;DR: The results suggest that prolonged MS early in life affects the adult behavior of F0 female mice and hippocampal neuronal plasticity, whereas the mothers' previous experience has effects on the behavior of their F1 offspring through disturbances of mother‐infant interactions.
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Consequences of early life stress on genomic landscape of H3K4me3 in prefrontal cortex of adult mice

TL;DR: The distribution of H3K4me3 in prefrontal cortex showed relatively low variability across all individuals, and only some subtle changes were revealed in mice with a history of early life stress.
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Anhedonia in the Shadow of Chronic Social Defeat Stress, or when the Experimental Context Matters

TL;DR: However, the results presented in the literature are contradictory: sweet solution intake, which is considered as a parameter of hedonic/anhedonic behavior in animals, responds quite differently to stressful situations in that it is either unaffected or increased or decreased as discussed by the authors.
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Anhedonia in the shadow of chronic social defeat stress, or When the experimental context matters

TL;DR: Analysis of literature data allowed us to conclude that the lack of a significant decrease in sweet solution intake in stressed animals is no evidence of lack of depression, and this decrease is evidence of anhedonia only provided other symptoms of depression are present.
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Sex-specific behavioral and structural alterations caused by early-life stress in C57BL/6 and BTBR mice.

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of early life stress on male and female mice of C57BL/6 (B6) and BTBR (BTBR) strains were evaluated and it was found that the early-life stress did not lead to changes in the level of social behavior.