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What is Learned Determines How Pavlovian Conditioned Fear is Consolidated in the Brain

Authors: Leake JLeidl DMLay BPPFam JPGiles MCQureshi OAWestbrook RFHolmes NM


Affiliations

1 School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales 2052, Australia.
2 Department of Psychology, Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec HB4 1R6, Canada.
3 School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales 2052, Australia n.holmes@unsw.edu.au.

Description

Activity in the basolateral amygdala complex (BLA) is needed to encode fears acquired through contact with both innate sources of danger (i.e., things that are painful) and learned sources of danger (e.g., being threatened with a gun). However, within the BLA, the molecular processes required to consolidate the two types of fear are not the same: protein synthesis is needed to consolidate the first type of fear (so-called first-order fear) but not the latter (so-called second-order fear). The present study examined why first- and second-order fears differ in this respect. Specifically, it used a range of conditioning protocols in male and female rats, and assessed the effects of a BLA infusion of the protein synthesis inhibitor, cycloheximide, on first- and second-order conditioned fear. The results revealed that the differential protein synthesis requirements for consolidation of first- and second-order fears reflect differences in what is learned in each case. Protein synthesis in the BLA is needed to consolidate fears that result from encoding of relations between stimuli in the environment (stimulus-stimulus associations, typical for first-order fear) but is not needed to consolidate fears that form when environmental stimuli associate directly with fear responses emitted by the animal (stimulus-response associations, typical for second-order fear). Thus, the substrates of Pavlovian fear conditioning in the BLA depend on the way that the environment impinges upon the animal. This is discussed with respect to theories of amygdala function in Pavlovian fear conditioning, and ways in which stimulus-response associations might be consolidated in the brain.


Keywords: basolateral amygdalaconsolidationfearmemoryprotein synthesissecond-order conditioning


Links

PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37963767/

DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0513-23.2023