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Volume 15 Issue 1, January 2014

‘Offshoots’ by Jennie Vallis, inspired by the Review on p7.

Research Highlight

  • Highly specific experiences can be inherited by subsequent generations, and this transmission occurs through parental gametes.

    • Leonie Welberg
    Research Highlight

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In Brief

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Research Highlight

  • Prior exposure to females suppresses sex-related aggression through a pheromone-based contact chemosensation mechanism.

    • Monica Hoyos Flight
    Research Highlight
  • Fear extinction induces structural changes at inhibitory synapses in the amygdala to silence fear circuits.

    • Katherine Whalley
    Research Highlight
  • Cyclooxygenase 2 inhibitors could be used to prevent at least some of the unwanted side effects of the marijuana component Δ9-THC without impairing its beneficial properties.

    • Leonie Welberg
    Research Highlight
  • The nuclear export of histone deacetylase 5 triggers a regenerative transcriptional response after axon injury in peripheral neurons.

    • Katherine Whalley
    Research Highlight
  • Two new studies reveal that parvalbumin-expressing interneurons form extensive connections with mitral cells and tufted cells in the olfactory bulb and have an important role in odour processing.

    • Darran Yates
    Research Highlight
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In Brief

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Review Article

  • To enable the complex neural circuitry found in vertebrates, many axons undergo extensive branching. Here, Kalil and Dent review the roles of extracellular cues, intracellular signalling pathways, cytoskeletal dynamics and neuronal activity in axon branching and terminal arbor formation in the vertebrate CNS.

    • Katherine Kalil
    • Erik W. Dent
    Review Article
  • Itch — the sensation that induces the desire to scratch — results from activity in a subset of nociceptors, all of which also respond to painful stimuli. LaMotte and colleagues describe the studies that have begun to pinpoint the molecular transducers and neural pathways that transmit itch and the coding mechanisms that distinguish it from pain.

    • Robert H. LaMotte
    • Xinzhong Dong
    • Matthias Ringkamp
    Review Article
  • After nerve injury, signals from the lesion site must reach the nucleus in order to initiate the transcriptional responses required for regeneration. In this Review, Rishal and Fainzilber describe recent developments in our understanding of the molecular basis of this retrograde injury signalling system.

    • Ida Rishal
    • Mike Fainzilber
    Review Article
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Opinion

  • The combined actions of immune cells, vascular cells and neurons mediate a 'neuroinflammatory' response to pathogens, trauma and degeneration in the CNS. Here, Xanthos and Sandkühler show that similar responses can be evoked by neural activity and describe the physiological and pathological roles of this 'neurogenic neuroinflammation'.

    • Dimitris N. Xanthos
    • Jürgen Sandkühler
    Opinion
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Science and Society

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Correspondence

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