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Funded Projects › FP7

EURO-NEUROSTRESS · Dissecting the Central Stress Response: Bridging the Genotype-Phenotype Gap

FP7Status: CLOSED1 April 201131 March 2016EU funding €1,500,000

The biological response to stress is concerned with the maintenance of homeostasis in the presence of real or perceived challenges. This process requires numerous adaptive responses involving changes in the central nervous and neuroendocrine systems. When a situation is perceived as stressful, the brain activates many neuronal circuits linking centers involved in sensory, motor, autonomic, neuroendocrine, cognitive, and emotional functions in order to adapt to the demand. However, the details of the pathways by which the brain translates stressful stimuli into the final, integrated biological response are presently incompletely understood. Nevertheless, it is clear that dysregulation of these physiological responses to stress can have severe psychological and physiological consequences, and there is much evidence to suggest that inappropriate regulation, disproportional intensity, or chronic and/or irreversible activation of the stress response is linked to the etiology and pathophysiology of anxiety disorders and depression.Understanding the neurobiology of stress by focusing on the brain circuits and genes, which are associated with, or altered by, the stress response will provide important insights into the brain mechanisms by which stress affects psychological and physiological disorders. This is an integrated multidisciplinary project from gene to behavior using state-of-the-art moue genetics and animal models. We will employ integrated molecular, biochemical, physiological and behavioral methods, focusing on the generation of mice genetic models as an in vivo tool, in order to study the central pathways and molecular mechanisms mediating the stress response. Defining the contributions of known and novel gene products to the maintenance of stress-linked homeostasis may improve our ability to design therapeutic interventions for, and thus manage, stress-related disorders.

Consortium · 1 organisation

coordinator

WEIZMANN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE

IL · €1,500,000

Research fields

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