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- Publications
- Influence
Corpus callosum: effects of neonatal hormones on sexual dimorphism in the rat
- R. Fitch, A. Berrebi, P. Cowell, L. Schrott, V. Denenberg
- Psychology, Medicine
- Brain Research
- 7 May 1990
The rat's corpus callosum is sexually dimorphic, with the male's being larger. In addition, giving rats extra stimulation in infancy via handling increases callosal area in males, but not in females.… Expand
Corpus callosum: Demasculinization via perinatal anti-androgen
- R. Fitch, P. Cowell, L. Schrott, V. Denenberg
- Biology, Medicine
- International Journal of Developmental…
- 1991
The male rat's corpus callosum is significantly larger than the female's. This dimorphism depends in part on the early presence of testosterone, since postnatal administration of testosterone to… Expand
Behavior, Cortical Ectopias, and Autoimmunity in BXSB-Yaa and BXSB-Yaa+ Mice
- L. Schrott, N. S. Waters, G. Boehm, G. Sherman, V. Denenberg
- Biology, Medicine
- Brain, Behavior, and Immunity
- 1 September 1993
The BXSB-Yaa recombinant inbred strain was created by crossing a male SB/Le with a female C57BL/6J. A Y chromosome factor derived from the SB/Le male, known as the autoimmune accelerator (Yaa), leads… Expand
Prenatal oxycodone exposure impairs spatial learning and/or memory in rats
- Chris Davis, La’Tonya M. Franklin, G. Johnson, L. Schrott
- Psychology, Medicine
- Behavioural Brain Research
- 1 September 2010
Recent changes in demographic patterns of drug use have resulted in the increased non-medical use of prescription opiates. These users are younger and more likely to be female, which has the… Expand
Chronic oxycodone induces axonal degeneration in rat brain
- R. Fan, L. Schrott, +5 authors N. Korneeva
- Medicine
- BMC neuroscience
- 23 March 2018
BackgroundChronic opioid therapy for non-malignant pain conditions has significantly increased over the last 15 years. Recently, the correlation between opioid analgesics and alternations in brain… Expand
Effect of training and environment on brain morphology and behavior
- L. Schrott
- Medicine
- Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : ). Supplement
- 1 July 1997
Using defined rearing or training paradigms, environmental stimulation has been found to increase brain weight (especially forebrain), cortical thickness, the number of glial cells, the glia to… Expand
Corpus callosum: ovarian hormones and feminization
- R. Fitch, P. Cowell, L. Schrott, V. Denenberg
- Psychology, Medicine
- Brain Research
- 1 March 1991
The rat's corpus callosum is sexually dimorphic with the male's being larger. This difference appears to depend in part on the neonatal presence of testosterone in the male and ovarian hormones in… Expand
Corpus callosum: interactive effects of infantile handling and testosterone in the rat.
- V. Denenberg, R. Fitch, L. Schrott, P. Cowell, N. Waters
- Medicine
- 1 August 1991
Previous research found that the corpus callosum of male rats is larger than that of females; handling rats in infancy enhances this sex difference; and female rat pups, when handled in infancy and… Expand
Acute Physiological Stress Promotes Clustering of Synaptic Markers and Alters Spine Morphology in the Hippocampus
- V. Sebastián, Jim Brian Estil, D. Chen, L. Schrott, P. Serrano
- Biology, Medicine
- PloS one
- 24 October 2013
GluA2-containing AMPA receptors and their association with protein kinase M zeta (PKMζ) and post-synaptic density-95 (PSD-95) are important for learning, memory and synaptic plasticity processes.… Expand
Expansive gene transfer in the rat CNS rapidly produces amyotrophic lateral sclerosis relevant sequelae when TDP-43 is overexpressed.
- D. Wang, R. Dayton, +6 authors R. Klein
- Biology, Medicine
- Molecular therapy : the journal of the American…
- 1 December 2010
Improved spread of transduction in the central nervous system (CNS) was achieved from intravenous administration of adeno-associated virus serotype-9 (AAV9) to neonatal rats. Spinal lower motor… Expand