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Circadian glucocorticoid oscillations promote learning-dependent synapse formation and maintenance

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TLDR
It is shown that circadian glucocorticoid peaks promote postsynaptic dendritic spine formation in the mouse cortex after motor skill learning, whereas troughs are required for stabilizing newly formed spines that are important for long-term memory retention.
Abstract
Excessive glucocorticoid exposure during chronic stress causes synapse loss and learning impairment. Under normal physiological conditions, glucocorticoid activity oscillates in synchrony with the circadian rhythm. Whether and how endogenous glucocorticoid oscillations modulate synaptic plasticity and learning is unknown. Here we show that circadian glucocorticoid peaks promote postsynaptic dendritic spine formation in the mouse cortex after motor skill learning, whereas troughs are required for stabilizing newly formed spines that are important for long-term memory retention. Conversely, chronic and excessive exposure to glucocorticoids eliminates learning-associated new spines and disrupts previously acquired memories. Furthermore, we show that glucocorticoids promote rapid spine formation through a non-transcriptional mechanism by means of the LIM kinase-cofilin pathway and increase spine elimination through transcriptional mechanisms involving mineralocorticoid receptor activation. Together, these findings indicate that tightly regulated circadian glucocorticoid oscillations are important for learning-dependent synaptic formation and maintenance. They also delineate a new signaling mechanism underlying these effects.

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The untapped power of allostasis promoted by healthy lifestyles.

TL;DR: An evolutionary view helps to see mood as the product of interactions between neurobiological mechanisms and the structures the authors give to their societies and environments.
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Evidence for Similar Prefrontal Structural and Functional Alterations in Male and Female Rats Following Chronic Stress or Glucocorticoid Exposure.

TL;DR: The data suggest that chronic stress or glucocorticoid exposure induces a relatively undifferentiated pattern of structural and functional alterations in mPFC in both males and females.
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Mechanisms of sleep and circadian ontogeny through the lens of neurodevelopmental disorders

TL;DR: It is suggested that the coincident maturation of sleep with synaptic physiology is one of the core reasons for the commonplace disruption of sleep in NDDs and argued that disorders with well-defined molecular genetics can provide a unique lens for understanding and unraveling the molecular correlates that link the development of sleep and circadian rhythms to health and disease.
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Integrative medicine: Breaking down silos of knowledge and practice an epigenetic approach.

TL;DR: The future of medicine is discussed in the context of epigenetic influences during the entire life course and the lived experiences of each person, avoiding as much as possible the "medicalization" of the individual and taking a more humanistic view.
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Reduced sialylation triggers homeostatic synapse and neuronal loss in middle-aged mice.

TL;DR: Crossbreeding with complement C3-deficient mice rescued the earlier onset of neuronal and synaptic loss as well as the changes in microglial arborization and revealed no pro-inflammatory changes indicating an innate homeostatic immune process leading to the removal of synapses and neurons in GNE+/- mice during aging.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protective and Damaging Effects of Stress Mediators

TL;DR: The long-term effect of the physiologic response to stress is reviewed, which I refer to as allostatic load, which is the ability to achieve stability through change.
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Imaging neuronal subsets in transgenic mice expressing multiple spectral variants of GFP.

TL;DR: Each of 25 independently generated transgenic lines expressed XFP in a unique pattern, even though all incorporated identical regulatory elements (from the thyl gene), for example, all retinal ganglion cells or many cortical neurons were XFP positive in some lines, whereas only a few ganglions or only layer 5 cortical pyramids were labeled in others.
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Two Receptor Systems for Corticosterone in Rat Brain: Microdistribution and Differential Occupation

TL;DR: It is concluded that CORT action via CR may be involved in a tonic (permissive) influence on brain function with the septohippocampal complex as a primary target.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain corticosteroid receptor balance in health and disease.

TL;DR: The balance in actions mediated by the two corticosteroid receptor types in these neurons appears critical for neuronal excitability, stress responsiveness, and behavioral adaptation and Dysregulation of this MR/GR balance brings neurons in a vulnerable state with consequences for regulation of the stress response and enhanced vulnerability to disease in genetically predisposed individuals.
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