HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Shir Shlomi et al. from the Department of Neurobiology, The George SWise Faculty of Life Sciences, School of Neurobiology, Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel have published the article: Imbalance in Sirt1 Alternative Splicing in Response to Chronic Stress during the Adolescence Period in Female Mice, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: It is not surprising, then, that when looking at the long-term effect of stress, the majority of the animal studies focused on early-childhood 2 of 14 stress exposure . The authors focus on two mechanisms of alternative splicing . . .
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