The Role of Cerebellar Glia in Aggression

1 min read
Source: Neuroscience News
The Role of Cerebellar Glia in Aggression
Photo: Neuroscience News
TL;DR Summary

Interactions between neurons and glial cells in the cerebellum, specifically the Bergmann glial cells in the cerebellar vermis, have been found to significantly influence aggression levels in mice. Using fiber photometry, researchers observed that changes in intracellular calcium levels in cerebellar glia correlated with dominance in mouse fights. This study highlights the potential therapeutic strategies targeting cerebellar glia for managing anger and aggression, offering hope for new treatments in human behavioral disorders.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

2

Time Saved

4 min

vs 5 min read

Condensed

92%

88572 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Neuroscience News