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Nucleus reuniens mediates the extinction of contextual fear conditioning
- Source :
- Behav Brain Res
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Learning and remembering the context in which events occur requires interactions between the hippocampus (HPC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). The nucleus reuniens (RE) is a ventral midline thalamic nucleus that coordinates activity in the mPFC and HPC and is involved in spatial and contextual memory. We recently found that the RE is critical for contextual fear conditioning in rats, a form of learning that involves interactions between the HPC and mPFC. Here we examined whether the RE mediates the extinction of contextual fear. After contextual fear conditioning, rats underwent an extinction procedure in which they were merely exposed to the conditioning context; freezing behavior during the extinction procedure and during a retrieval test 24 h later served as an index of conditioned fear. Muscimol inactivation of the RE prior to extinction impaired the acquisition of both short- and long-term extinction memories. Similarly, inactivation of the RE prior to the extinction retrieval test also impaired the expression of extinction; this effect was not state-dependent. Taken together, these results reveal that the extinction of contextual fear memories requires the RE, which is consistent with a broader role for the RE in forms of learning that require HPC-mPFC interactions.
- Subjects :
- Male
Memory, Long-Term
Thalamus
Conditioning, Classical
Midline Thalamic Nuclei
Hippocampus
Prefrontal Cortex
Context (language use)
Article
Extinction, Psychological
03 medical and health sciences
Behavioral Neuroscience
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
Memory
Neural Pathways
Animals
Learning
Rats, Long-Evans
Prefrontal cortex
030304 developmental biology
0303 health sciences
Muscimol
Brain
Extinction (psychology)
social sciences
Fear
humanities
Rats
Freezing behavior
chemistry
Mental Recall
Nucleus reuniens
Psychology
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18727549
- Volume :
- 374
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Behavioural brain research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....28c1462dce7425ddecc1e03f79864028