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Functional anatomy of neural circuits regulating fear and extinction

Author(s)
Sheng, Morgan Hwa-Tze; Knapska, Ewelina; Macias, Matylda; Mikosz, Marta; Nowak, Aleksandra; Owczarek, Dorota; Wawrzyniak, Marcin; Pieprzyk, Marcelina; Cymerman, Iwona A.; Werka, Tomasz; Maren, Stephen; Jaworski, Jacek; Kaczmarek, Leszek; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
The memory of fear extinction is context dependent: fear that is suppressed in one context readily renews in another. Understanding of the underlying neuronal circuits is, therefore, of considerable clinical relevance for anxiety disorders. Prefrontal cortical and hippocampal inputs to the amygdala have recently been shown to regulate the retrieval of fear memories, but the cellular organization of these projections remains unclear. By using anterograde tracing in a transgenic rat in which neurons express a dendritically-targeted PSD-95:Venus fusion protein under the control of a c-fos promoter, we found that, during the retrieval of extinction memory, the dominant input to active neurons in the lateral amygdala was from the infralimbic cortex, whereas the retrieval of fear memory was associated with greater hippocampal and prelimbic inputs. This pattern of retrieval-related afferent input was absent in the central nucleus of the amygdala. Our data show functional anatomy of neural circuits regulating fear and extinction, providing a framework for therapeutic manipulations of these circuits.
Date issued
2012-10
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/78855
Department
Picower Institute for Learning and Memory
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences (U.S.)
Citation
Knapska, E. et al. “Functional Anatomy of Neural Circuits Regulating Fear and Extinction.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109.42 (2012): 17093–17098. ©2013 National Academy of Sciences
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0027-8424
1091-6490

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