Publications

Project's publications are published here.

Scientific publications
  1. Vallianatou, T, de Souza Anselmo C, Tsiara I, Bèchet N, Lundgaard I, Globisch D. Identification of New Ketamine Metabolites and Their Detailed Distribution in the Mammalian Brain.
    ACS Chemical Neuroscience. 2024 Mar; 15, 7 (1335–1341).

     
  2. Björväng RD, Walldén Y, Fransson E, Comasco E, Sundström-Poromaa I, Skalkidou A. Mid-pregnancy allopregnanolone levels and trajectories of perinatal depressive symptoms. Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2024 Jun 1;164:107009.

     
  3. Özel F, Stratmann M, Papadopoulos FC, Rüegg J, Bornehag CG. Gender-specific play behavior in relation to autistic traits and behavioral difficulties at the age of seven in the SELMA study. PloS one. 2024 Aug 28;19(8):e0308605.

     
  4. Spengler, D., Rein, T. Peripheral immune cell-derived matrix metalloprotease 8 (MMP8): brain trafficking promotes depression-like behavior. Sig Transduct Target Ther 9, 136 (2024).
     
  5. Björvang RD, Vrettou M, Bujanda Cundin X, Del Prete E, Rüegg J, Lager S, di Bernardo D, Comasco E, Skalkidou A. Differentially expressed transcripts associated with depressive symptoms during pregnancy and postpartum Mol Psychiatry. 2025 Jun 5. 
    doi:
     
  6. Lu SSM, Ekbäck E, Nilsson Sommar J, Anderson S, Olstrup H, Harlid S, Gustafsson S, Mattisson K, Stockfelt L, Rein T, Nalvarte I, Rüegg J, Oudin A.
    Long-term exposure to air pollution and road traffic noise in relation to dispensed antidepressant medications: A Swedish cohort study. Environmental Research. 2025: 285, Part 2,122435.

     
  7. Stratmann, M., Özel, F., Marinopoulou, M. et al. Prenatal exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals and the association with behavioural difficulties in 7-year-old children in the SELMA study. J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol 35, 981–991 (2025). 

     
  8. Wagner A., Reifegerste D., Scherr S. The same, but different: Understanding responsibility attributions for depression with a cross-national survey in the United States and Germany. Health Policy. Dec 2025; 162: 105445

     
  9. Abualia K, Cediel-Ulloa A, Allsopp P, Augustine A, Bergquist J, Bornehag C-G, Broberg K, Caporale N, Comasco E, di Bernardo D, Domingues R, Drakvik E, Gennings C, Gingnell M, Globisch D, Kippler M, McSorley E, Mulhern M, Motwani HV, Nalvarte I, Oudin A, Rahman A, Reifegerste D, Rein T, Skalkidou A, Strain JJ, Testa G, Tsiukalo L, van Wijngaarden E, Yeates A, Rüegg J and Antczak P (2026) The role of gene-environment interactions in endocrine-sensitive life stages for shaping mental health: focus on the RE-MEND project. Front. Psychiatry 17:1738584.