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1. Age-related decline in social interaction is associated with decreased c-Fos induction in select brain regions independent of oxytocin receptor expression profiles

2. Development of the circadian system in early life: maternal and environmental factors

3. Acute Physiological and Psychological Stress Response in Youth at Clinical High-Risk for Psychosis

4. Iterative Metaplasticity Across Timescales: How Circadian, Ultradian, and Infradian Rhythms Modulate Memory Mechanisms

5. Circadian Rhythms in Fear Extinction Recall Depend on the Time of Day of Extinction Recall, Not the Time of Day of Extinction Learning

7. Neurobiology of Stress–Health Relationships

8. Reflections on Bruce S. McEwen’s contributions to stress neurobiology and so much more

9. Association between Altered Cortisol Profiles and Neurobehavioral Impairment after Mild Traumatic Brain Injury in College Students

10. Memory and the circadian system: identifying candidate mechanisms by which local clocks in the brain may regulate synaptic plasticity

11. Analysis of c-Fos induction in response to social interaction in male and female Fisher 344 rats

12. A users guide to HPA axis research

13. Adolescent caffeine consumption increases adulthood anxiety-related behavior and modifies neuroendocrine signaling

14. A working model for the assessment of disruptions in social behavior among aged rats: The role of sex differences, social recognition, and sensorimotor processes

15. Contributors

16. Hippocampus and Hippocampal Neurons

17. Circadian misalignment has differential effects on affective behavior following exposure to controllable or uncontrollable stress

18. Variations in Phase and Amplitude of Rhythmic Clock Gene Expression across Prefrontal Cortex, Hippocampus, Amygdala, and Hypothalamic Paraventricular and Suprachiasmatic Nuclei of Male and Female Rats

19. Adrenal-dependent and -independent stress-induced Per1 mRNA in hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus and prefrontal cortex of male and female rats

20. Glucocorticoid hormones are both a major circadian signal and major stress signal: How this shared signal contributes to a dynamic relationship between the circadian and stress systems

21. The relationship between cannabis use and cortisol levels in youth at ultra high-risk for psychosis

22. CRTC2 activation in the suprachiasmatic nucleus, but not paraventricular nucleus, varies in a diurnal fashion and increases with nighttime light exposure

23. Absence of glucocorticoids augments stress-induced Mkp1 mRNA expression within the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis

24. Dynamic glucocorticoid-dependent regulation of Sgk1 expression in oligodendrocytes of adult male rat brain by acute stress and time of day

25. Sex differences in morning cortisol in youth at ultra high-risk for psychosis

26. Glucocorticoid Fast Feedback Inhibition of Stress-Induced ACTH Secretion in the Male Rat: Rate Independence and Stress-State Resistance

27. Diurnal Corticosterone Presence and Phase Modulate Clock Gene Expression in the Male Rat Prefrontal Cortex

28. Tonic, But Not Phasic Corticosterone, Constrains Stress ActivatedExtracellular-Regulated-Kinase 1/ 2 Immunoreactivity Within the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus

29. Inhibitory Effects of Corticosterone in the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus (PVN) on Stress-Induced Adrenocorticotrophic Hormone Secretion and Gene Expression in the PVN and Anterior Pituitary

30. Coordination between Prefrontal Cortex Clock Gene Expression and Corticosterone Contributes to Enhanced Conditioned Fear Extinction Recall

31. Inescapable but not escapable stress leads to increased struggling behavior and basolateral amygdala c-fos gene expression in response to subsequent novel stress challenge

32. Diurnal expression of functional and clock-related genes throughout the rat HPA axis: system-wide shifts in response to a restricted feeding schedule

33. Environmental novelty is associated with a selective increase in Fos expression in the output elements of the hippocampal formation and the perirhinal cortex

34. Differential Responses of Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Immediate Early Genes to Corticosterone and Circadian Drive

35. Immediate-early gene induction in hippocampus and cortex as a result of novel experience is not directly related to the stressfulness of that experience

36. Expression of c-fos and BDNF mRNA in subregions of the prefrontal cortex of male and female rats after acute uncontrollable stress

37. Surgical and pharmacological suppression of glucocorticoids prevents the enhancement of morphine conditioned place preference by uncontrollable stress in rats

38. Acute Glucocorticoid Pretreatment Suppresses Stress-Induced Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Hormone Secretion and Expression of Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone hnRNA but Does Not Affect c-fos mRNA or Fos Protein Expression in the Paraventricular Nucle

39. Role of the dorsomedial hypothalamus in glucocorticoid-mediated feedback inhibition of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis

40. Decrements in Nuclear Glucocorticoid Receptor (GR) Protein Levels and DNA Binding in Aged Rat Hippocampus

41. Neonatal Handling Enhances Contextual Fear Conditioning and Alters Corticosterone Stress Responses in Young Rats

42. Adrenal-dependent diurnal modulation of conditioned fear extinction learning

43. Greater glucocorticoid receptor activation in hippocampus of aged rats sensitizes microglia

44. Selective Blockade of the Mineralocorticoid Receptor Impairs Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Expression of Habituation

45. Role of Endogenous Glucocorticoids in Immune System Function: Regulation and Counterregulation

46. Acute Exposure to a Novel Stressor Further Reduces the Habituated Corticosterone Response to Restraint in Rats

47. Long-term changes in mineralocorticoid and glucocorticoid receptor occupancy following exposure to an acute stressor

48. Defense of Adrenocorticosteroid Receptor Expression in Rat Hippocampus: Effects of Stress and Strain1

49. The Impact of the Nonpeptide Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone Antagonist Antalarmin on Behavioral and Endocrine Responses to Stress**This research was supported by NIMH Grant MH-50479 and the Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder

50. Glucocorticoid Receptors Are Differentially Expressed in the Cells and Tissues of the Immune System

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