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Structural and synaptic plasticity in stress-related disorders.

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TLDR
This review highlights the effects of stress on the structure and function of neurons within the mesocorticolimbic brain systems known to regulate mood and motivation, and discusses the implications of these spine adaptations on neuronal activity and pathological behaviors implicated in mood disorders.

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Neurobiology of Resilience

TL;DR: A growing literature in rodents is highlighted that is starting to complement the human work by identifying the active behavioral, neural, molecular and hormonal basis of resilience, which can pave the way for an innovative approach to drug development for a range of stress-related syndromes.
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Sex differences in stress-related psychiatric disorders: neurobiological perspectives.

TL;DR: Clinical studies that identify sex differences within the activity of these circuits, as well as preclinical studies that demonstrate cellular and molecular sex differences in stress responses systems, reveal sex differences from the molecular to the systems level that increase endocrine, emotional, and arousal responses to stress in females.
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Integrating neuroimmune systems in the neurobiology of depression

TL;DR: Interventions targeting immune-related cellular and molecular pathways may benefit subsets of MDD patients with immune dysregulation and ongoing studies examining neuroimmune mechanisms that influence neuronal activity as well as synaptic plasticity are discussed.
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Pathogenesis of depression: Insights from human and rodent studies

TL;DR: This review summarizes the most recent discoveries and insights for which parallel findings have been obtained in human depressed subjects and rodent models of mood disorders in order to examine the potential etiology of depression.
References
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Book

The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the first stage of perception: growth of the assembly, the phase sequence, and the problem of Motivational Drift, which is the line of attack.
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The tail suspension test: A new method for screening antidepressants in mice

TL;DR: A novel test procedure for antidepressants was designed in which a mouse is suspended by the tail from a lever, the movements of the animal being recorded, and the test can separate the locomotor stimulant doses from antidepressant doses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioural despair in rats: a new model sensitive to antidepressant treatments.

TL;DR: Positive findings with atypical antidepressant drugs such as iprindole and mianserin suggest that the method may be capable of discovering new antidepressants hitherto undetectable with classical pharmacological tests.
Journal ArticleDOI

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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mTOR-Dependent Synapse Formation Underlies the Rapid Antidepressant Effects of NMDA Antagonists

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that the effects of ketamine are opposite to the synaptic deficits that result from exposure to stress and could contribute to the fast antidepressant actions of ketamines.
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