Brooks Jaden B, Robinson Payton K, Warner Sean, Halder Priya, Trask Sydney
Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, USA; Department of Psychological Science, Purdue University, USA.
Department of Psychological Science, Purdue University, USA.
Behav Brain Res. 2025 Mar 12;481:115438. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2025.115438. Epub 2025 Jan 17.
Exposure to extreme stress can negatively impact behavior and lead to prolonged fear sensitization. These processes can be studied in the lab using stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL), where prior exposure to inescapable stress exacerbates later contextual fear conditioning. A common method to reduce conditional fear is through extinction, where a conditional stimulus once paired with an unconditional (US; e.g., a footshock) is presented alone. Previous research shows that extinction learning may not be as effective at reducing fear behavior in rodents previously exposed to stress, mirroring similar extinction impairments observed in aged rodents. Weak-shock exposure (termed US deflation) following conditioning with a strong shock has been proposed to be an alternative to extinction where presentations of weaker versions of the US would work to modify the original fear memory rather than create a new memory as in extinction and thus more precisely target the original context fear memory. While effective under normal conditions, it has yet to be studied how effective US deflation is at reducing stress-enhanced context fear. Here we aimed to test if US deflation could reduce fear in a SEFL paradigm and identify any constraints of this effect. Following 15 inescapable footshocks or matched chamber exposure, male and female Long Evans rats received 1 context-shock pairing or 5 context-shock pairings in a novel context. The next day, they were given either 10 weak footshocks (US deflation) or extinction before behavioral testing. Following training with 1 context-shock pairing, both US deflation and extinction functioned similarly in reducing freezing behavior of stressed rodents. However, following 5 context-shock pairings, only the unstressed rodents displayed a significant decrease in fear behavior, suggesting that prior stress coupled with more robust conditioning can limit the efficacy of US deflation in reducing fear behavior. Finally, we replicated the SEFL effect in aged rodents and found that they showed a significant decrease in stress-enhanced fear learning following US deflation, whereas our previous research showed impairments of traditional extinction in aged rodents. Together, these results suggest that US deflation can reduce SEFL in both adult and aged rodents following a single context-shock pairing, with additional pairings rendering this procedure ineffective at mitigating the effects of prior stress.
暴露于极端压力会对行为产生负面影响,并导致长期的恐惧敏感化。这些过程可以在实验室中通过应激增强恐惧学习(SEFL)进行研究,即在这种实验中,先前暴露于无法逃避的压力会加剧后来的情境恐惧条件反射。减少条件性恐惧的一种常见方法是消退,即曾经与无条件刺激(US;例如电击足部)配对的条件刺激单独呈现。先前的研究表明,消退学习在减少先前暴露于压力的啮齿动物的恐惧行为方面可能效果不佳,这与在老年啮齿动物中观察到的类似消退障碍情况相似。在用强电击进行条件反射后进行弱电击暴露(称为US消退)已被提议作为消退的替代方法,其中呈现较弱版本的US将有助于修改原始恐惧记忆,而不是像消退那样创建新记忆,从而更精确地针对原始情境恐惧记忆。虽然在正常条件下有效,但尚未研究US消退在减少应激增强的情境恐惧方面的效果如何。在这里,我们旨在测试US消退是否可以在SEFL范式中减少恐惧,并确定这种效果的任何限制因素。在经历15次无法逃避的足部电击或匹配的箱体暴露后,雄性和雌性Long Evans大鼠在一个新的情境中接受1次情境 - 电击配对或5次情境 - 电击配对。第二天,在行为测试前,它们要么接受10次弱足部电击(US消退),要么接受消退训练。在进行1次情境 - 电击配对训练后,US消退和消退在减少应激啮齿动物的僵住行为方面作用相似。然而,在进行5次情境 - 电击配对后,只有未受应激的啮齿动物的恐惧行为显著减少,这表明先前的压力加上更强有力的条件反射会限制US消退在减少恐惧行为方面的效果。最后,我们在老年啮齿动物中复制了SEFL效应,发现它们在US消退后应激增强的恐惧学习显著减少,而我们之前的研究表明老年啮齿动物在传统消退方面存在障碍。总之,这些结果表明,在单次情境 - 电击配对后,US消退可以减少成年和老年啮齿动物的SEFL,而额外的配对会使该程序在减轻先前压力的影响方面无效。