Agnieszka Chocyk, PhD
Adjunct
Department of Pharmacology
Diplomas, academic degrees:
- Habilitation in biomedical sciences, Institute of Pharmacology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland – May 2015,
- Ph.D. in biomedical sciences, Institute of Pharmacology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland – February 2005,
- M.Sc. in biology, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Institute of Molecular Biology, Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland – September 1996
Scientific interests:
- The effects of early-life stress on brain maturation and functions: focus on the medial prefrontal cortex, substantia nigra and VTA
- Maturation and plasticity of the medial prefrontal cortex during adolescence
- Early-life stress as important environmental factor in etiology of anxiety, mood disorders and addiction
- The mechanisms of resilience and vulnerability to stress-related psychopathologies
- The interaction between dopaminergic system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
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Early-life stress affects peripheral, blood-brain barrier, and brain responses to immune challenge in juvenile and adult rats.
Anna Solarz, Iwona Majcher-Maślanka, Joanna Kryst, Agnieszka Chocyk
Brain, behavior, and immunity, 10.1016/j.bbi.2022.11.005 S0889-1591(22)00434-2
PMID:36400335 -
Effects of chronic fluoxetine treatment on anxiety- and depressive-like behaviors in adolescent rodents - systematic review and meta-analysis.
Joanna Kryst, Iwona Majcher-Maślanka, Agnieszka Chocyk
Pharmacological reports : PR, 10.1007/s43440-022-00420-w
PMID:36151445 -
Effects of early-life stress and sex on blood-brain barrier permeability and integrity in juvenile and adult rats.
Anna Solarz, Iwona Majcher-Maślanka, Agnieszka Chocyk
Developmental neurobiology, 10.1002/dneu.22846
PMID:34320279 -
A Search for Biomarkers of Early-life Stress-related Psychopathology: Focus on 70-kDa Heat Shock Proteins.
Anna Solarz, Iwona Majcher-Maślanka, Joanna Kryst, Agnieszka Chocyk
Neuroscience, S0306-4522(21)00106-8 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.02.026
PMID:33662529 -
1MeTIQ and olanzapine, despite their neurochemical impact, did not ameliorate performance in fear conditioning and social interaction tests in an MK-801 rat model of schizophrenia.
Magdalena Białoń, Agnieszka Chocyk, Iwona Majcher-Maślanka, Marcelina Żarnowska, Krzysztof Michalski, Lucyna Antkiewicz-Michaluk, Agnieszka Wąsik
Pharmacological reports : PR, 10.1007/s43440-020-00209-9
PMID:33403530
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The role of endoplasmic reticulum stress in the pathomechanisms of early-life stressinduced dysfunction of the prefronatal cortex and in the mechanisms of action of fluoxetine in children and adolescents - 2018-01-03 - 2021-01-02
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- 2016-01-04 - 2018-05-01
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- 2010-01-01 - 2014-01-02
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