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Volume 10 Issue 6, June 2009

From The Editors

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Research Highlight

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In Brief

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Research Highlight

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Review Article

  • The physiological response to stress is regulated by a complex neurocircuitry that integrates and interprets stress-related and homeostatic information. Ulrich-Lai and Herman describe this circuitry, including its adaptation to chronic stress and its overlap with circuits that underlie memory and reward.

    • Yvonne M. Ulrich-Lai
    • James P. Herman
    Review Article
  • Stress affects cognition and increases noradrenaline and dopamine levels in the prefrontal cortex (PFC). Amy Arnsten discusses the intracellular signalling pathways that mediate the effects of these catecholamines on PFC function during acute and chronic stress, focusing on working memory. An interview with Amy Arnsten for Neuropod is available fordownload.

    • Amy F. T. Arnsten
    Review Article
  • Stressful events often leave strong memories. Roozendaal and colleagues discuss how stress hormones and neurotransmitters acting in the amygdala mediate this phenomenon at the behavioural and synaptic level, and describe how stress-induced remodelling of amygdala neurons might underlie anxiety.

    • Benno Roozendaal
    • Bruce S. McEwen
    • Sumantra Chattarji
    Review Article
  • The effects of stress on the brain depend on the age at which the stress occurs. Reviewing data from animal and human studies, Lupien and colleagues discuss why different disorders emerge in individuals exposed to stress at different times in their lives. An interview with Sonia Lupien for Neuropod is available fordownload.

    • Sonia J. Lupien
    • Bruce S. McEwen
    • Christine Heim
    Review Article
  • Although stress is associated with many physical and mental illnesses, most individuals cope well with it. Feder and colleagues review the factors that underlie stress resilience, showing that it involves adaptive changes in specific neural circuits, neuromodulator levels and molecular pathways.

    • Adriana Feder
    • Eric J. Nestler
    • Dennis S. Charney
    Review Article
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Opinion

  • Stress induces the release of many stress mediators in the brain. Joëls and Baram show that the spatial and temporal niches of action of these mediators overlap and discuss how different mediators interact to enable appropriate responses to diverse stressors.

    • Marian Joëls
    • Tallie Z. Baram
    Opinion
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Correspondence

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Focus

  • Everyone experiences stress occasionally, but severe or chronic stress can have long-lasting effects on brain structure and function. This Focus issue highlights the latest advances in our understanding of how the brain responds to stress, the mechanisms that mediate the beneficial and adverse effects of stress on brain functioning, and factors that confer vulnerability and resilience to stress.

    Focus
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