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1.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 9459, 2019 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31263140

ABSTRACT

Recent work reveals that the extinction of conditioned fear depends upon the interval between conditioning and extinction. Extinction training that takes place within minutes to hours after fear conditioning fails to produce a long-term extinction memory, a phenomenon known as the immediate extinction deficit (IED). Neurobiological evidence suggests that the IED results from stress-induced dysregulation of prefrontal cortical circuits involved in extinction learning. However, a recent study in humans suggests that an "event boundary" between fear conditioning and extinction protects the conditioning memory from interference by the extinction memory, resulting in high levels of fear during a retrieval test. Here, we contrast these hypotheses in rats by arranging extinction trials to follow conditioning trials with or without an event boundary; in both cases, extinction trials are delivered in proximity to shock-elicited stress. After fear conditioning, rats either received extinction trials 60-sec after the last conditioning trial (continuous, no event boundary) or 15-minutes after conditioning (segmented, a standard "immediate" extinction procedure associated with an event boundary). Both groups of animals showed decreases in conditional freezing to the auditory conditioned stimulus (CS) during extinction and exhibited an equivalent IED relative to non-extinguished controls when tested 48 hours later. Thus, eliminating the event boundary between conditioning and extinction with the continuous extinction procedure did not prevent the IED. These data suggest that the IED is the result of shock-induced stress, rather than boundary-induced reductions in memory interference.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Fear/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Animals , Female , Freezing Reaction, Cataleptic , Male , Memory/physiology , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
2.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 4527, 2018 10 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30375397

ABSTRACT

The thalamic nucleus reuniens (RE) receives dense projections from the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), interconnects the mPFC and hippocampus, and may serve a pivotal role in regulating emotional learning and memory. Here we show that the RE and its mPFC afferents are critical for the extinction of Pavlovian fear memories in rats. Pharmacological inactivation of the RE during extinction learning or retrieval increases freezing to an extinguished conditioned stimulus (CS); renewal of fear outside the extinction context was unaffected. Suppression of fear in the extinction context is associated with an increase in c-fos expression and spike firing in RE neurons to the extinguished CS. The role for the RE in suppressing extinguished fear requires the mPFC, insofar as pharmacogenetically silencing mPFC to RE projections impairs the expression of extinction memory. These results reveal that mPFC-RE circuits inhibit the expression of fear, a function that is essential for adaptive emotional regulation.


Subject(s)
Afferent Pathways/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Extinction, Psychological/physiology , Fear , Midline Thalamic Nuclei/physiology , Prefrontal Cortex/physiology , Afferent Pathways/drug effects , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/drug effects , Extinction, Psychological/drug effects , Freezing Reaction, Cataleptic , GABA-A Receptor Agonists/pharmacology , Learning/physiology , Male , Memory/drug effects , Memory/physiology , Midline Thalamic Nuclei/drug effects , Midline Thalamic Nuclei/metabolism , Muscimol/pharmacology , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/metabolism , Prefrontal Cortex/drug effects , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
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