Magal Ari, Mintz Matti
Psychobiology Research Unit, School of Psychological Sciences, Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel.
Eur J Neurosci. 2014 Nov;40(10):3548-55. doi: 10.1111/ejn.12714. Epub 2014 Sep 3.
The amygdala and the cerebellum serve two distinctively different functions. The amygdala plays a role in the expression of emotional information, whereas the cerebellum is involved in the timing of discrete motor responses. Interaction between these two systems is the basis of the two-stage theory of learning, according to which an encounter with a challenging event triggers fast classical conditioning of fear-conditioned responses in the amygdala and slow conditioning of motor-conditioned responses in the cerebellum. A third stage was hypothesised when an apparent interaction between amygdala and cerebellar associative plasticity was observed: an adaptive rate of cerebellum-dependent motor-conditioned responses was associated with a decrease in amygdala-dependent fear-conditioned responses, and was interpreted as extinction of amygdala-related fear-conditioned responses by the cerebellar output. To explore this hypothesis, we mimicked some components of classical eyeblink conditioning in anesthetised rats by applying an aversive periorbital pulse as an unconditioned stimulus and a train of pulses to the cerebellar output nuclei as a cerebellar neuronal-conditioned response. The central amygdala multiple unit response to the periorbital pulse was measured with or without a preceding train to the cerebellar output nuclei. The results showed that activation of the cerebellar output nuclei prior to periorbital stimulation produced diverse patterns of inhibition of the amygdala response to the periorbital aversive stimulus, depending upon the nucleus stimulated, the laterality of the nucleus stimulated, and the stimulus interval used. These results provide a putative extinction mechanism of learned fear behavior, and could have implications for the treatment of pathologies involving abnormal fear responses by using motor training as therapy.
杏仁核和小脑发挥着两种截然不同的功能。杏仁核在情绪信息的表达中起作用,而小脑则参与离散运动反应的定时。这两个系统之间的相互作用是学习两阶段理论的基础,根据该理论,遇到具有挑战性的事件会触发杏仁核中恐惧条件反应的快速经典条件作用以及小脑中运动条件反应的缓慢条件作用。当观察到杏仁核和小脑联合可塑性之间存在明显相互作用时,人们提出了第三个阶段:依赖小脑的运动条件反应的适应率与依赖杏仁核的恐惧条件反应的减少相关,并被解释为小脑输出使与杏仁核相关的恐惧条件反应消退。为了探究这一假设,我们通过施加厌恶性眶周脉冲作为非条件刺激,并向小脑输出核施加一系列脉冲作为小脑神经元条件反应,在麻醉大鼠中模拟了经典眨眼条件作用的一些成分。在有或没有先前向小脑输出核施加一系列脉冲的情况下,测量中央杏仁核对眶周脉冲的多单位反应。结果表明,在眶周刺激之前激活小脑输出核会产生对杏仁核对眶周厌恶性刺激反应的不同抑制模式,这取决于所刺激的核、所刺激核的侧别以及所使用的刺激间隔。这些结果提供了一种习得性恐惧行为的假定消退机制,并且可能对通过使用运动训练作为治疗手段来治疗涉及异常恐惧反应的病症具有启示意义。