Journal: eLife
Article Title: Early life stressful experiences escalate aggressive behavior in adulthood via changes in transthyretin expression and function
doi: 10.7554/eLife.77968
Figure Lengend Snippet: ( A ) Breeding pairs and experimental timeline. ( B ) Comparative analysis of behavioral profile during RI session between F1 males originating from control males crossed with control females (CF1) and F1 males originating from peripubertal stress exposed SEagg-F0 males crossed with control females (Eagg-F1) males (N=12 mice/biological replicates per group). ( C ) Attack latency comparison between parent SEagg-F0 (N=6 mice) and Eagg-F1 males (N=12 mice). ( D ) T3 content in Hypo and PFC of CF1 and Eagg-F1 males (N=5 mice/biological replicates per group). ( E ) Ttr , Nrgn and Trh mRNA expression analysis in Hypo and PFC of CF1 and Eagg-F1 males (N=6 mice/biological replicates per group). Data are presented as mean (± SD) and analyzed by unpaired Student’s t-test {ns (p> 0.05),* (p< 0.05), ** (p< 0.01), and *** ( P <0.001)} between CF1 and Eagg-F1 groups or SEagg-F0 vs EaggF1. Figure 6—source data 1. Data points for RI behavioral scoring and attack latency. Figure 6—source data 2. Data points for T3 ELISA.
Article Snippet: The primary antibodies {anti-TTR rabbit polyclonal, anti-Nrgn rabbit polyclonal; anti-GAPDH mouse monoclonal} and secondary antibodies {anti-rabbit IgG HRP (Cell Signaling Technology, 7074P2) and anti-mouse IgG HRP (Cell Signaling Technology, 7076P2)} were used at adequate dilutions.
Techniques: Control, Comparison, Expressing, Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay