HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Julia S. Lord from the Department of Cell Biology and Physiology and the Neuroscience Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA have published the research work: Early life sleep disruption potentiates lasting sex-specific changes in behavior in genetically vulnerable, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: The study shows that during sensitive periods of interacts with underlying genetic vulnerability to drive and sex-specific changes in behavior. This study showed that beginning as early as could be measured at P23, homozygous Shank3ΔC/ΔC males sleep less than WT littermates . . .
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