PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Investigating how stress may cause sleep and memory deficits

Stress may target a specific neural pathway in mice to worsen sleep quality and impair memory.

2025-06-09
(Press-News.org) Stress worsens sleep quality and can impair memory. Shinjae Chung, from the University of Pennsylvania, led a study to explore a neural pathway in male mice that stress may influence to cause sleep and memory disturbances.  

In their JNeurosci paper, the researchers artificially activated neurons in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) that were previously linked to stress. This experimental manipulation made mice sleep less and impaired how well mice performed in a memory task. Notably, when mice were stressed, artificially inhibiting these PVN neurons reduced stress-related memory issues while slightly improving sleep.  

Further probing what neural pathway may be involved, Chung and colleagues discovered that stress and artificial activation of the PVN neurons separately targeted another brain region called the lateral hypothalamus (LH). Bridging their findings together, the researchers found that this neural pathway from the PVN to the LH may be involved in stress-related memory impairment and sleep disruptions.  

According to the researchers, this neural pathway may inform future work exploring ways to improve sleep and cognitive deficits associated with stress-related disorders, at least in males. 

### 

Please contact media@sfn.org for full-text PDF. 

About JNeurosci 

JNeurosci was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship. 

About The Society for Neuroscience 

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 35,000 members in more than 95 countries. 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers find thousands of pediatric firearm deaths linked to more permissive state gun laws

2025-06-09
Guns are now the leading cause of death for youth in the United States. Researcher from Mass General Brigham investigated whether firearm mortality rates among U.S. children ages 0-17 changed in the 13 years following a 2010 Supreme Court ruling that applied the Second Amendment to state and local governments. In states with the most permissive firearm laws, they found evidence of 6,029 more pediatric deaths due to firearms than would have been expected based on the existing demographic trends—and more than 1,400 excess ...

Landmark test for coeliac disease promises to take away the pain of diagnosis

2025-06-09
Imagine having to eat something that makes you sick – just to see what’s making you ill in the first place.  That’s the harsh reality of current diagnostic tests for coeliac disease, which require people to eat large amounts of gluten for weeks in order to get an accurate diagnosis. But this painful process could soon be a thing of the past, with WEHI researchers and industry partner Novoviah Pharmaceuticals developing a world-first blood test that can identify the condition in patients – even when they’re on gluten-free diets.   At a glance New clinical research published in the high-impact ...

A recipe for success: beefing up the taste of cultured meat with amino acids

2025-06-09
Tokyo, Japan – Across the world the demand for meat is growing, despite associated environmental and animal welfare costs. Although lab-grown – or cultured – meat could be part of the answer, scientists have yet to perfect one crucial detail: the taste. In an article to be published in Food Chemistry, researchers from the Institute of Industrial Science, The University of Tokyo, have measured and found a way to control the key amino acids responsible for flavor in a step toward making cultured meat taste just like the real thing. The push toward cultured meat has been adopted because conventional production is not a sustainable solution for ...

Protecting peppers from devastating viral diseases through gene pyramiding

2025-06-09
Even with today’s advanced agricultural technologies, plant diseases can still be extremely devastating to crops, causing billions of dollars in losses worldwide every year. Begomoviruses represent a prominent example of this threat—these whitefly-transmitted pathogens cause yellow leaf curl disease in peppers and can destroy up to 100% of fruit yield in affected fields across Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Breeding crops that are resistant to begomoviruses has long been the most effective and widely used strategy for preventing such massive losses. Though usually effective, this approach has serious limitations, especially when dealing with mixed infections. Scientists ...

Lizards of Madagascar

2025-06-09
Kyoto, Japan -- After the island of Madagascar drifted away from India 88 million years ago, isolating it from all other landmasses, its flora and fauna evolved in seclusion. As these transformed into plants and animals completely unique to their island, Madagascar became a biodiversity hotspot unlike anywhere else on Earth. An important facet of this biodiversity is an ecological process called endozoochory, which is when animals eat plant seeds and then poop them out somewhere else, aiding in the spread of the plants. Most research on endozoochory has focused on the roles of ...

Beyond the brain: how BCIs are rewiring medicine and redefining humanity

2025-06-09
Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology is opening an unprecedented chapter in human-machine integration by establishing direct communication between the brain and external devices. Once a science fiction concept, BCI is now reshaping the landscape of neurosurgery and neurorehabilitation. By decoding brain signals to restore lost motor, sensory, and language functions, BCIs offer new hope for individuals affected by paralysis, aphasia, and neurodegenerative diseases. But their impact extends well beyond the clinic—BCIs are poised to influence cognition, ethical governance, and national security. As this disruptive technology matures, ...

Fossilized dinosaur gut shows that sauropods barely chewed

2025-06-09
Plant fossils found in the abdomen of a sauropod support the long-standing hypothesis that these dinosaurs were herbivores, finds a study publishing June 9 in the Cell Press journal Current Biology. The dinosaur, which was alive an estimated 94 to 101 million years ago, ate a variety of plants and relied almost entirely on its gut microbes for digestion.   “No genuine sauropod gut contents had ever been found anywhere before, despite sauropods being known from fossils found on every continent and despite the group ...

School dental treatments stop kids’ tooth decay in its tracks

2025-06-09
Two topical treatments applied to kids’ cavities can stop the majority of them from progressing for years, according to a study led by NYU College of Dentistry and published in JAMA Network Open. Treating more than 10,000 cavities in New York City elementary school students, the researchers found that both atraumatic restorations (ART) and silver diamine fluoride (SDF) kept most dental decay from worsening, supporting the use of non-surgical approaches for managing cavities. Children miss an estimated 34 million hours of school each year due to emergency dental care. Bringing cavity prevention programs to schools can improve kids’ oral health and stave ...

How high is your dementia risk? It might depend on where you live

2025-06-09
In one of the largest and most comprehensive studies of its kind, a research team led at UC San Francisco has identified the regions where dementia occurs most often.  What They Discovered Using the Mid-Atlantic* as the basis for comparison, researchers found that dementia rates were 25% higher in the Southeast.** The Northwest*** and Rocky Mountains**** were both 23% higher, and the South***** was 18% higher. The Southwest, which includes California, was 13% higher; while the Northeast, which includes New York, was 7% higher.  These differences remained when researchers accounted for factors like age, ...

Firearm laws and pediatric mortality in the US

2025-06-09
About The Study: The results of this study demonstrate that permissive firearm laws contributed to thousands of excess firearm deaths among children living in states with permissive policies. Future work should focus on determining which types of laws conferred the most harm and which offered the most protection.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Jeremy Samuel Faust, MD, MS, email jsfaust@bwh.harvard.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1363) Editor’s ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study reveals how fatal school shootings disrupt local economies

American Psychological Association 2025 Convention, Aug. 7-9, Denver

Appendix cancer incidence has quadrupled in older millennials

Even bumble bee queens need personal days, too

Carbon capture method mines cement ingredients from the air

Fostering Integration: SELINA’s 5th project Workshop on the Azores unites partners to strengthen collaboration

Reelin marks cocaine-activated brain neurons and regulates cocaine reward

Creatine is safe, effective and important for everyone, longtime researcher says

Robots made of linked particle chains

Research alert: laying the groundwork for potential age-related macular degeneration therapies

It’s not the game, it’s the group: Sports fans connect the most over rituals

AI identifies key gene sets that cause complex diseases

Virginia Tech study sheds light on solar farm impacts to property values

Study defines key driver of aggressive ovarian cancer

Rings of time: unearthing climate secrets from ancient trees

Medical AI systems failing to disclose inaccurate race, ethnicity information

Light and AI drive precise motion in soft robotic arm developed at Rice

Vital connections between journalists and whistleblowers under increasing pressure

Patients are opting in for 10 years of breast cancer treatment

Center for Bioenergy Innovation taps Cregger, Eckert as chief science officers

Anthropologists map Neanderthals’ long and winding roads across Europe and Eurasia

Stress genes clear dead cells, offering disease insights

Healthy sleep patterns in adolescence predict better cardiovascular health in the future

A study led by CIC bioGUNE delves into the complexity of the most aggressive form of prostate cancer

Effects of psilocybin on religious and spiritual attitudes and behaviors in clergy from major world religions

Investigating how stress may cause sleep and memory deficits

Researchers find thousands of pediatric firearm deaths linked to more permissive state gun laws

Landmark test for coeliac disease promises to take away the pain of diagnosis

A recipe for success: beefing up the taste of cultured meat with amino acids

Protecting peppers from devastating viral diseases through gene pyramiding

[Press-News.org] Investigating how stress may cause sleep and memory deficits
Stress may target a specific neural pathway in mice to worsen sleep quality and impair memory.