Center for the Neurobiology of Stress Resilience and Psychiatric Disorders, Discipline of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, The Chicago Medical School, School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, 3333 Green Bay Road, North Chicago, IL, USA.
Center for the Neurobiology of Stress Resilience and Psychiatric Disorders, Discipline of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, The Chicago Medical School, School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, 3333 Green Bay Road, North Chicago, IL, USA.
Neuroscience. 2023 Oct 15;530:108-132. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2023.08.030. Epub 2023 Aug 26.
Fear-potentiated startle (FPS) has been widely used to study fear processing in humans and rodents. Human studies showed higher startle amplitudes and exaggerated fear reactivity to unpredictable vs. predictable threats in individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Although human FPS studies use both sexes, a surprisingly limited number of rodent FPS studies use females. Here we investigate the effects of signal-threat contingency, signal-threat order and threat predictability on FPS in both sexes. We use a classic fear-conditioning protocol (100% contingency of cue and shock pairings, with forward conditioning such that the cue co-terminates with the shock) and compare it to modified fear-conditioning protocols (70% contingency; backward conditioning; or cue and shock un-paired). Although there are no sex differences in the startle amplitudes when corrected for body weight, females consistently demonstrate higher shock reactivity during fear-conditioning. Both sexes and strains demonstrate comparable levels of cued, non-cued, and contextual fear in the classic FPS and FPS following fear-conditioning with 70% contingency or backward order (cue co-starts with shock). However, in the classic FPS, Sprague-Dawley females show reduced proportion between cued fear and cue-elicited vigilant state than males. Lastly, a prominent sex difference is uncovered following unpredictable fear-conditioning (cue and shock un-paired), with Wistar, but not Sprague-Dawley, females showing significantly higher startle overall during the FPS recall, regardless of trial type, and higher contextual fear than males. This striking sex difference in processing unpredictable threats in rodent FPS might help to understand the mechanisms underlying higher incidence of PTSD in women.
恐惧增强的惊跳反应(FPS)已被广泛用于研究人类和啮齿动物的恐惧处理。人类研究表明,患有创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的个体对不可预测的威胁比可预测的威胁表现出更高的惊跳幅度和更夸张的恐惧反应。尽管人类 FPS 研究使用了男女两性,但令人惊讶的是,只有极少数啮齿动物 FPS 研究使用了雌性。在这里,我们研究了信号-威胁关联性、信号-威胁顺序和威胁可预测性对两性 FPS 的影响。我们使用了经典的恐惧条件反射协议(100%的线索和冲击配对关联,以及正向条件反射,即线索与冲击同时发生),并将其与修改后的恐惧条件反射协议进行了比较(70%的关联;反向条件反射;或线索和冲击不配对)。尽管校正体重后惊跳幅度没有性别差异,但雌性在恐惧条件反射期间始终表现出更高的惊吓反应。两性和不同品系在经典 FPS 和具有 70%关联或反向顺序的 FPS 后,在经典 FPS 和 70%关联或反向顺序的 FPS 后,均表现出相似的线索、非线索和情境恐惧水平(线索与冲击同时开始)。然而,在经典 FPS 中,与雄性相比,Sprague-Dawley 雌性在线索恐惧与线索诱发警觉状态之间的比例降低。最后,在不可预测的恐惧条件反射(线索和冲击不配对)后发现了一个显著的性别差异,无论试验类型如何,Wistar 雌性,而不是 Sprague-Dawley 雌性,在整个 FPS 回忆中表现出明显更高的惊跳反应,并且比雄性表现出更高的情境恐惧。这种在啮齿动物 FPS 中处理不可预测威胁的显著性别差异可能有助于理解女性 PTSD 发生率更高的机制。