Journal article
Relaxin’ the brain: a case for targeting the nucleus incertus network and relaxin-3/RXFP3 system in neuropsychiatric disorders
JR Kumar, R Rajkumar, T Jayakody, S Marwari, JM Hong, S Ma, AL Gundlach, MKP Lai, GS Dawe
British Journal of Pharmacology | WILEY | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1111/bph.13564
Abstract
Relaxin-3 has been proposed to modulate emotional–behavioural functions such as arousal and behavioural activation, appetite regulation, stress responses, anxiety, memory, sleep and circadian rhythm. The nucleus incertus (NI), in the midline tegmentum close to the fourth ventricle, projects widely throughout the brain and is the primary site of relaxin-3 neurons. Over recent years, a number of preclinical studies have explored the function of the NI and relaxin-3 signalling, including reports of mRNA or peptide expression changes in the NI in response to behavioural or pharmacological manipulations, effects of lesions or electrical or pharmacological manipulations of the NI, effects of centr..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
The research completed by the authors' laboratories reviewed here was enabled by the Biomedical Research Council of Singapore (BMRC 10/1/21/19/645), the National Medical Research Council of Singapore (NMRC/1287/2011), the NMRC NUHS Centre Grant - Neuroscience Phenotyping Core (NMRC/CG/013/2013) and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (Grants 1005988, 1067522 and 1106330). The authors wish to thank Dr Francis Tan Chee Kuan, Dr Corinne Lee Liying and Mr Farooq Usman for insightful scientific discussion and Mr Ho Woon Fei for excellent technical and administrative assistance.