A role for the interoceptive insular cortex in the consolidation of learned fear
Autor: | Carlos Madrid, Fernando Torrealba, José Patricio Casanova, Marco Contreras, María Rodríguez, Mónica Vásquez |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Male Thalamus Insular cortex Interoception Rats Sprague-Dawley 03 medical and health sciences Behavioral Neuroscience Neural activity chemistry.chemical_compound 0302 clinical medicine Memory Conditioning Psychological medicine Animals Fear conditioning Enzyme Inhibitors Anisomycin Early Growth Response Protein 1 Fear processing in the brain Cerebral Cortex Behavior Animal Genes fos Fear Rats 030104 developmental biology medicine.anatomical_structure chemistry Cerebral cortex Psychology Neuroscience Insula 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Cognitive psychology Saxitoxin Sodium Channel Blockers |
Zdroj: | Behavioural brain research. 296 |
ISSN: | 1872-7549 |
Popis: | A growing body of evidence suggests that learned fear may be related to the function of the interoceptive insular cortex. Using an auditory fear conditioning paradigm in rats, we show that the inactivation of the posterior insular cortex (pIC), the target of the interoceptive thalamus, prior to training produced a marked reduction in fear expression tested 24h later. Accordingly, post-training anisomycin infused immediately, but not 6h after, also reduced fear expression tested the following day, supporting a role for the pIC in consolidation of fear memory. The long-term (ca. a week) and reversible inactivation of the pIC with the sodium channel blocker neosaxitoxin, immediately after fear memory reactivation induced a progressive decrease in the behavioral expression of conditioned fear. In turn, we observed that fear memory reactivation is accompanied by an enhanced expression of Fos and Zif268, early genes involved in neural activity and plasticity. Taken together these data indicate that the pIC is involved in the regulation of fear memories. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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