LeDoux Lab 2009 SfN Abstracts
 
Program#/Poster#: 479.21/FF122
Title: Is the temporal structure of fear conditioning processed in the amygdala?
Location: South Hall A
Presentation Time: Monday, Oct 19, 2009, 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM
Authors: *L. DIAZ-MATAIX1, J. E. LEDOUX1, V. DOYERE2;
1New York Univ., New York, NY; 2NAMC, CNRS-UMR8620, Univ. Paris-Sud, Orsay, France
Abstract: In Pavlovian conditioning, a conditioned stimulus (CS) is paired with an unconditioned stimulus (US), so that the CS comes to elicit conditioned responses. What is learned is not only that the CS predicts the arrival of the US, but also when the US is expected to arrive. In fear conditioning with long CS-US intervals, temporal patterned behavior can be observed in rats after as few as one CS-US pairings (Davis et al., 2001). In the present experiments, we asked whether the amygdala processes the CS-US interval. In a first approach, we used a reconsolidation paradigm in rats to test whether a change in the CS-US interval is detected and triggers the updating of fear memory in the amygdala. Rats with bilateral cannulae in the lateral amygdala were submitted to a strong training of auditory fear conditioning. The next day, rats were submitted to a single CS-US trial and immediately infused in the amygdala with anisomycin or vehicle. The data of the long-term memory test indicate that a protein synthesis dependent reconsolidation was triggered in the amygdala only when the CS-US interval was different from the initial training. The results suggest that a change in the expected time of the US arrival (US-ETA) triggers an updating of the fear memory in the amygdala through a reconsolidation process. Further experiments using electrophysiological recordings are currently performed to analyse whether activity in the amygdala changes with the temporal structure of the CS-US association, providing a potential basis for the encoding of the US-ETA in the amygdala, and therefore a possible detection mechanism for violation in the expectancy structure.
Support: R37 MH038774
P50 MH058911
R01 MH046516
CNRS-UPS-NYU EmoTime
ANR-Memotime