Now showing items 1-4 of 4

  • Acute invariant NKT cell activation triggers an immune response that drives prominent changes in iron homeostasis 

    Huang, Hua; Zuzarte‑Luis, Vanessa; Fragoso, Gabriela; Calvé, Annie; Hoang, Tuan Anh; Oliero, Manon; Chabot‑Roy, Geneviève; Mullins-Dansereau, Victor; Lesage, Sylvie; Santos, Manuela (Nature research, 2020-12-03)
    Iron homeostasis is an essential biological process that ensures the tissue distribution of iron for various cellular processes. As the major producer of hepcidin, the liver is central to the regulation of iron metabolism. The liver is also home to ...
  • A direct interaction between two Restless Legs Syndrome predisposing genes : MEIS1 and SKOR1 

    Catoire, Helene; Faezeh, Sarayloo; Amar, Karim Mourabit; Apuzzo, Sergio; Grant, Alanna; Rochefort, Daniel; Xiong, Lan; Montplaisir, Jacques-Yves; Earley, Christopher J.; Tureck, Gustavo; Dion, Patrick A.; Rouleau, Guy (Nature research, 2018-08-15)
    Restless Legs syndrome (RLS) is a common sleep disorder for which the genetic contribution remains poorly explained. In 2007, the frst large scale genome wide association study (GWAS) identifed three genomic regions associated with RLS. MEIS1, BTBD9 ...
  • Number agreement processing in adolescents with and without developmental language disorder (DLD) : evidence from event-related brain potentials 

    Courteau, Émilie; Royle, Phaedra; Steinhauer, Karsten (Nature research, 2023-12-21)
    In morphologically richer languages, including French, one must learn the specific properties of number agreement in order to understand the language, and this learning process continues into adolescence. This study examined similarities and differences ...
  • Sleep habits, academic performance, and the adolescent brain structure 

    Urrila, Anna S.; Artiges, Eric; Massicotte, Jessica; Miranda, Ruben; Vulser, Hélène; Bézivin-Frere, Pauline; Lapidaire, Winok; Lemaître, Hervé; Penttilä, Jani; Conrod, Patricia; Garavan, Hugh; Paillère-Martinot, Marie-Laure; Martinot, Jean-Luc; Imagen Consortium (Nature Research, 2017-02-09)
    Here we report the first and most robust evidence about how sleep habits are associated with regional brain grey matter volumes and school grade average in early adolescence. Shorter time in bed during weekdays, and later weekend sleeping hours correlate ...