Pajser Alisa, Foster Christian, Gaeddert Brooke, Pickens Charles L
Department of Psychological Sciences, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, 66506, USA.
Department of Psychological Sciences, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS, 66506, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2021 Sep 24;414:113476. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2021.113476. Epub 2021 Jul 21.
Extended fear training can lead to initially low fear expression that grows over time, termed fear incubation. Conversely, a single fear conditioning session typically results in high fear initially that is sustained over time. Fear expression decreases across extended training, suggesting that a fear extinction-like process might be responsible for low fear observed soon after training. Because of the prominent role medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) plays in fear conditioning and extinction, we decided to examine Fos expression resulting from a cued fear retrieval test to gain insight into possible mechanisms involved in extended training fear incubation. Male Long-Evans rats received 1 or 10 days of tone-shock pairings or tone-only exposure (while lever-pressing for food). Two days after the end of fear training, rats received a cued fear test, with perfusions timed to visualize Fos expression during test. As expected, the limited fear conditioning group exhibited higher fear in the test than any of the other groups (as measured with conditioned suppression of lever-pressing). Interestingly, we found that extended training animals (whether they received tone-shock pairings or tone-only exposure) expressed higher levels of Fos in both prelimbic and infralimbic cortices than limited training animals. There was no association between fear expression and mPFC Fos expression. These results suggest we may have visualized Fos expression related to operant overtraining rather than conditioned fear related processes. Further research is needed to determine the neurobiological basis of extended training fear incubation and to determine processes represented by the pattern of Fos expression we observed.
延长恐惧训练会导致最初较低的恐惧表达,这种表达会随着时间推移而增加,这被称为恐惧潜伏期。相反,单次恐惧条件训练通常会导致最初较高的恐惧,并随着时间持续存在。在延长训练过程中恐惧表达会降低,这表明类似恐惧消退的过程可能是训练后不久观察到的低恐惧的原因。由于内侧前额叶皮层(mPFC)在恐惧条件训练和消退中起着重要作用,我们决定检查线索性恐惧恢复测试所导致的Fos表达,以深入了解延长训练恐惧潜伏期可能涉及的机制。雄性Long-Evans大鼠接受1天或10天的音调-电击配对或仅音调暴露(同时按压杠杆获取食物)。恐惧训练结束两天后,大鼠接受线索性恐惧测试,并安排灌注时间以在测试期间观察Fos表达。正如预期的那样,有限恐惧条件训练组在测试中表现出比其他任何组都更高的恐惧(通过杠杆按压的条件性抑制来衡量)。有趣的是,我们发现延长训练的动物(无论它们接受音调-电击配对还是仅音调暴露)在前边缘皮层和下边缘皮层中表达的Fos水平都高于有限训练的动物。恐惧表达与mPFC Fos表达之间没有关联。这些结果表明,我们观察到的可能是与操作性过度训练相关的Fos表达,而不是与条件性恐惧相关的过程。需要进一步研究以确定延长训练恐惧潜伏期的神经生物学基础,并确定我们观察到的Fos表达模式所代表的过程。