In response to a stressful encounter, the brain activates a comprehensive stress system that engages the organism in an adaptive response to the threatening situation. This stress system acts on multiple peripheral tissues and feeds back to the brain; one of its key players is the family of corticosteroid hormones. Corticosteroids affect brain functioning through both delayed, genomic and rapid, non-genomic mechanisms. The latter mode of action has long been known, but it is only in recent years that the physiological basis in the brain is beginning to be unravelled. We now know that corticosteroids exert rapid, non-genomic effects on the excitability and activation of neurons in (amongst others) the hypothalamus, hippocampus, amygdala and ...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
For many years the glucocorticoid receptor – mediating slow genomic actions – was considered to be t...
Recent evidence shows that corticosteroid hormones exert rapid non-genomic effects on neurons in the...
Stress causes the release of many transmitters and hormones, including corticosteroids. These molecu...
After stress, circulating levels of stress hormones such as corticosterone are markedly increased. T...
Corticosteroid hormones are released in high amounts after stress. The hormones enter the brain comp...
The brain is continuously exposed to varying levels of adrenal corticosteroid hormones such as corti...
Following stress exposure, the rodent brain is exposed to a cocktail of hormones, such as the adrena...
Corticosteroid hormones easily enter the brain and bind to receptors that translocate to the nucleus...
Glucocorticoid hormone-binding receptors are vital to many biological processes. The effects of rece...
After stress, the brain is exposed to waves of stress mediators, including corticosterone (in rodent...
The stress hormone cortisol acts on the brain, supporting adaptation and time-adjusted coping proces...
The balance in actions mediated by mineralocorticoid (MR) and glucocorticoid (GR) receptors in certa...
Glucocorticoid secretion occurs in a circadian pattern and in response to stress. Among the broad ar...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
For many years the glucocorticoid receptor – mediating slow genomic actions – was considered to be t...
Recent evidence shows that corticosteroid hormones exert rapid non-genomic effects on neurons in the...
Stress causes the release of many transmitters and hormones, including corticosteroids. These molecu...
After stress, circulating levels of stress hormones such as corticosterone are markedly increased. T...
Corticosteroid hormones are released in high amounts after stress. The hormones enter the brain comp...
The brain is continuously exposed to varying levels of adrenal corticosteroid hormones such as corti...
Following stress exposure, the rodent brain is exposed to a cocktail of hormones, such as the adrena...
Corticosteroid hormones easily enter the brain and bind to receptors that translocate to the nucleus...
Glucocorticoid hormone-binding receptors are vital to many biological processes. The effects of rece...
After stress, the brain is exposed to waves of stress mediators, including corticosterone (in rodent...
The stress hormone cortisol acts on the brain, supporting adaptation and time-adjusted coping proces...
The balance in actions mediated by mineralocorticoid (MR) and glucocorticoid (GR) receptors in certa...
Glucocorticoid secretion occurs in a circadian pattern and in response to stress. Among the broad ar...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
Every disturbance of the body, either real or imagined, evokes a stress response. Essential to this ...
For many years the glucocorticoid receptor – mediating slow genomic actions – was considered to be t...