Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Extinction recall of fear memories formed before stress is not affected despite higher theta activity in the amygdala.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

August 13, 2018

Journal

eLife

Volume/Issue

7

ISSN

2050-084X

Stress is known to exert its detrimental effects not only by enhancing fear, but also by impairing its extinction. However, in earlier studies stress exposure preceded both processes. Thus, compared to unstressed animals, stressed animals had to extinguish fear memories that were strengthened by prior exposure to stress. Here, we dissociate the two processes to examine if stress specifically impairs the acquisition and recall of fear extinction. Strikingly, when fear memories were formed before stress exposure, thereby allowing animals to initiate extinction from comparable levels of fear, recall of fear extinction was unaffected. Despite this, we observed a persistent increase in theta activity in the BLA. Theta activity in the mPFC, by contrast, was normal. Stress also disrupted mPFC-BLA theta-frequency synchrony and directional coupling. Thus, in the absence of the fear-enhancing effects of stress, the expression of fear during and after extinction reflects normal regulation of theta activity in the mPFC, not theta hyperactivity in the amygdala.

Alternate Journal

Elife

PubMed ID

30102149

PubMed Central ID

PMC6125126

Authors

Mohammed Mostafizur Rahman
Ashutosh Shukla
Sumantra Chattarji

Keywords

Amygdala
Memory
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Mental Recall
Prefrontal Cortex
Animals
Extinction, Psychological
Theta Rhythm
Male
Fear
Stress, Physiological