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Struggling to Cope with the Climate of 2100

October 26, 2015

Struggling to Cope with the Climate of 2100

A new experimental study by Elvire Bestion, Julien Cote and colleagues shows that warmer climates accelerate the pace of life of lizards and this demographic change leads to a strong decrease in population growth rate that may ultimately result in population extinctions.

Image credit: Elvire Bestion

10/27/2015

Research article and synopsis

The Biology of PTSD

Pawel Licznerski, Ronald Duman and co-authors find that the activity of the protein kinase SGK1 is reduced in the prefrontal cortex of individuals with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and SGK1 inhibition can cause PTSD-related behavioral changes in an animal model. Read the accompanying Synopsis.

Image credit: Flickr user Marines

The Biology of PTSD

Recently Published Articles

Current Issue

Current Issue October 2015

10/29/2015

research article

Exercise and the Aging Brain

Ileana Soto, Gareth Howell, and co-authors show that age-related deterioration of the neurovascular unit and increased neuroinflammation in aging mice is prevented by long-term exercise, but not in the absence of apolipoprotein E.

Image credit: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002279

Exercise and the Aging Brain

10/23/2015

Research article

WAVE1, Cannabinoid Receptors and Pain

Christian Njoo, Rohini Kuner and colleagues reveal the actin nucleation complex WAVE1 as a hitherto unknown binding partner of cannabinoid receptor 1 and explore the functional role of this interaction in regulating pain-related structural plasticity.

Image credit: Biodiversity Heritage Library

WAVE1, Cannabinoid Receptors and Pain

10/23/2015

PRimer

Replay and Memory Consolidation

Lisa Genzel and Edwin Robertson examine the implications of a new study showing that the pattern of neuronal activity during the formation of a memory is replayed during sleep, changing memory circuits and enhancing the memory. Read the Research Article.

Replay and Memory Consolidation

Image credit: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002263

10/22/2015

Community Page

CitSci.org: a Platform for Enabling Citizen Science Projects

This Community Page from Yiwei Wang, Nicole Kaplan, Greg Newman and Russell Scarpino proposes a platform to support effective metadata documentation with a view to improving the discoverability and reusability of citizen-gathered science data.

CitSci.org: a Platform for Enabling Citizen Science Projects

Image credit: Flickr user: Mount Rainier National Park

10/16/2015

Unsolved Mystery

Why Do We Feel Sick When Infected?

It remains unclear why infection leads to adverse cognitive, emotional, and behavioral changes. This article from Keren Shakher and Guy Shakhar introduces the "Eyam hypothesis," suggesting that selection may favor such sickness behaviors because they limit disease transmission to kin.

Why Do We Feel Sick When Infected?

Image credit: Pixabay

10/16/2015

Research Article

Organ Growth: Scaling the Drosophila Wing

Scaling is a universal property of animal organs; this study identifies a molecular circuit involving TOR and Yorkie that underlies scaling of the Drosophila wing.

Organ Growth: Scaling the Drosophila Wing

Image credit: Joseph Parker

10/13/2015

Perspective

Reporting of Animal Research: Plenty of Room for Improvement

A systematic analysis of in vivo research reveals poor reporting of measures that reduce the risk of bias and an inverse relationship between impact factor and the reporting of randomization.

Reporting of Animal Research: Plenty of Room for Improvement

Image credit: Wikimedia Commons