A study led by a University of Louisville School of Medicine pediatrics and child neurology researcher reveals how a specific signaling mechanism in microglia, the brain’s immune cell, can regulate anxiety and grooming behaviors. These behaviors are core symptoms of autism and obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorders.
Brain immune cells found to regulate anxiety and grooming behaviors
- Post author:admin
- Post published:May 14, 2026
- Post category:uncategorized