All Stories

  1. Exacerbation of absence seizures by central prolactin in female taiep rats: An animal model of epilepsy-prone leukodystrophy
  2. Mecanismos fisiopatológicos de las crisis de ausencia en modelos animales
  3. Differences in memory performance: The effects of sex and reproductive experience on object recognition memory in high- and low-yawning Sprague‒Dawley rats
  4. 4-aminopyridine improves evoked potentials and ambulation in the taiep rat: A model of hypomyelination with atrophy of basal ganglia and cerebellum
  5. Characterization of sperm motility and testosterone secretion in the taiep myelin mutant, a model of demyelination
  6. Label-Free Non-Linear Optics for the Study of Tubulin-Dependent Defects in Central Myelin
  7. Sex-specific hypothalamic expression of kisspeptin, gonadotropin releasing hormone, and kisspeptin receptor in progressive demyelination model
  8. H-ABC tubulinopathy revealed by label-free second harmonic generation microscopy
  9. Testicular androgens determining the incidence of spike-wave discharges in taiep rats: A model of H-ABC leukodystrophy
  10. Effects of chronic taurine administration on healthy pregnant rats and the consequences on the offspring: Datasets for motor tests and oxidative stress
  11. Long-term taurine administration improves motor skills in a tubulinopathy rat model by decreasing oxidative stress and promoting myelination
  12. Longitudinal Evaluation of Cerebellar Signs of H-ABC Tubulinopathy in a Patient and in the taiep Model
  13. Cover Image, Volume 529, Issue 4
  14. The myelin mutant taiep rat as a model for developmental brain disorders
  15. Auditory impairment in H‐ABC tubulinopathy
  16. The deficiency of myelin in the mutant taiep rat induces a differential immune response related to protection from the human parasite Trichinella spiralis
  17. Taste association capabilities differ in high- and low-yawning rats versus outbred Sprague–Dawley rats after prolonged sugar consumption
  18. Taiep rats are an animal model of tubulinopathy
  19. WE analyze the role of maternal care on yawning and penile erections
  20. Brain processing of different images
  21. Follicular development in the myelin mutant taiep rat
  22. Juvenile Taiep rats have shorter dendritic trees in the dorsal field of the hippocampus without spatial learning disabilities
  23. Yawning reduces facial temperature in the high-yawning subline of Sprague-Dawley rats
  24. Differential organization of male copulatory patterns in high- and low-yawning-frequency sublines versus outbred Sprague–Dawley rats
  25. Central administration of oxytocin differentially increases yawning, penile erections and scratching in high- (HY) and low-yawning (LY) sublines of Sprague–Dawley rats
  26. Analysis of Chemokines and Receptors Expression Profile in the Myelin MutantTaiepRat
  27. Prophylactic Subacute Administration of Zinc Increases CCL2, CCR2, FGF2, and IGF-1 Expression and Prevents the Long-Term Memory Loss in a Rat Model of Cerebral Hypoxia-Ischemia
  28. Smell facilitates auditory contagious yawning in stranger rats
  29. Lordosis facilitation by leptin in ovariectomized, estrogen-primed rats requires simultaneous or sequential activation of several protein kinase pathways
  30. Sperm count and sperm motility decrease in old rats
  31. Subacute Zinc Administration and L-NAME Caused an Increase of NO, Zinc, Lipoperoxidation, and Caspase-3 during a Cerebral Hypoxia-Ischemia Process in the Rat
  32. Copulation and ejaculation in male rats under sexual satiety and the Coolidge effect
  33. Dopaminergic D2-like agonists produce yawning in the myelin mutant taiep and Sprague–Dawley rats
  34. The nitric oxide pathway participates in lordosis behavior induced by central administration of leptin
  35. Leptin facilitates lordosis behavior through GnRH-1 and progestin receptors in estrogen-primed rats
  36. Behavioral characterization of non-copulating male rats with high spontaneous yawning frequency rate
  37. Presynaptic dopaminergic agonists increased gripping-generated immobility episodes in the myelin-mutant taiep rat
  38. Comparative analysis of maternal care in the high-yawning (HY) and low-yawning (LY) sublines from sprague-dawley rats
  39. A review of the neuronal organization that participate on yawning
  40. Serotonergic-postsynaptic receptors modulate gripping-induced immobility episodes in maletaieprats
  41. Genetic and littermate influences on yawning in two selectively bred strains of rats
  42. Activation of serotonin 5-HT1-receptors decreased gripping-induced immobility episodes in taiep rats
  43. Perineal striated muscles: Anatomy, spinal motoneurons, and participation on copulatory behavior in male rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus)
  44. Prazosin increases immobility episodes in taiep rats without changes in the properties of α1 receptors
  45. Increased nitric oxide levels and nitric oxide synthase isoform expression in the cerebellum of the taiep rat during its severe demyelination stage
  46. Developmental impairment of compound action potential in the optic nerve of myelin mutant taiep rats
  47. α2 Adrenoceptors are involved in the regulation of the gripping-induced immobility episodes intaiep rats
  48. Enhanced binding of dopamine D1receptors in caudate-putamen subregions in High-Yawning Sprague-Dawley rats
  49. Characterization of the spontaneous and gripping-induced immobility episodes ontaiep rats
  50. Genotype-dependent effect of ACTH1–24 on grooming and yawning in two inbred strains of rats
  51. Behavioral differences between selectively bred rats: D1 versus D2 receptors in yawning and grooming
  52. Bombesin decreases yawning in a high-yawning subline of Sprague–Dawley rats
  53. Regional and temporal progression of reactive astrocytosis in the brain of the myelin mutant taiep rat
  54. Inhibition of Grooming by Pilocarpine Differs in High- and Low-Yawning Sublines of Sprague–Dawley Rats
  55. Patterns of connectivity of spinal interneurons with single muscle afferents
  56. Selective cortical and segmental control of primary afferent depolarization of single muscle afferents in the cat spinal cord
  57. Induced grooming transitions and open field behaviour differ in high- and low-yawning sublines of Sprague-Dawley rats
  58. Raphe magnus and reticulospinal actions on primary afferent depolarization of group I muscle afferents in the cat.
  59. Selective cortical control of information flow through different intraspinal collaterals of the same muscle afferent fiber
  60. Presynaptic modulation of spinal reflexes
  61. Two inbred rat sublines that differ in spontaneous yawning behavior also differ in their responses to cholinergic and dopaminergic drugs
  62. Differential action of (?)-baclofen on the primary afferent depolarization produced by segmental and descending inputs
  63. Genotypic dependency of spontaneous yawning frequency in the rat
  64. GABAergic modulation of yawning behavior
  65. Lordosis facilitation in estrogen primed rats by intrabrain injection of pregnanes
  66. Association of spontaneous and dopaminergic-induced yawning and penile erections in the rat