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Vaishnav Krishnan

Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine

Publications -  67
Citations -  13434

Vaishnav Krishnan is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social defeat & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 54 publications receiving 11926 citations. Previous affiliations of Vaishnav Krishnan include Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & University of Texas at Dallas.

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The molecular neurobiology of depression

TL;DR: Recent studies combining behavioural, molecular and electrophysiological techniques reveal that certain aspects of depression result from maladaptive stress-induced neuroplastic changes in specific neural circuits and show that understanding the mechanisms of resilience to stress offers a crucial new dimension for the development of fundamentally novel antidepressant treatments.
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Essential Role of BDNF in the Mesolimbic Dopamine Pathway in Social Defeat Stress

TL;DR: It is shown that viral-mediated, mesolimbic dopamine pathway–specific knockdown of brain-derived neurotrophic factor is required for the development of experience-dependent social aversion in mice experiencing repeated aggression.
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Molecular Adaptations Underlying Susceptibility and Resistance to Social Defeat in Brain Reward Regions

TL;DR: It is shown that molecular recapitulations of three prototypical adaptations associated with the unsusceptible phenotype are each sufficient to promote resistant behavior and validate a multidisciplinary approach to examine the neurobiological mechanisms of variations in stress resistance.
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Mania-like behavior induced by disruption of CLOCK.

TL;DR: It is shown that mice carrying a mutation in the Clock gene display an overall behavioral profile that is strikingly similar to human mania, including hyperactivity, decreased sleep, lowered depression-like behavior, lower anxiety, and an increase in the reward value for cocaine, sucrose, and medial forebrain bundle stimulation.
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Histone Deacetylase 5 Epigenetically Controls Behavioral Adaptations to Chronic Emotional Stimuli

TL;DR: It is suggested that proper balance of histone acetylation is a crucial factor in the saliency of a given stimulus and that disruption of this balance is involved in the transition from an acute adaptive response to a chronic psychiatric illness.