LeDoux Lab 2012 SfN Abstracts
 
Program#/Poster#: 399.21/FFF15
Title: Long-term dendritic spine remodeling in the rat lateral amygdala following fear conditioning involves circuit specific pruning of dendritic spines from low density dendrites
Location: Hall F-J
Presentation Time: Monday, Oct 15, 2012, 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Authors: *D. DUMITRIU1, Y. S. GROSSMAN1, R. GONZAGA2, C. FARB2, W. G. JANSSEN1, J. E. LEDOUX2, J. H. MORRISON1;
1Mount Sinai Sch. Med., NEW YORK, NY; 2New York Univ., New York, NY
Abstract: The amygdala is an essential structure to the development of long-term fear conditioning (FC). To date, investigation into the local circuit changes involved in FC have primarily focused on electrophysiological, biochemical and morphological changes in the lateral amygdala (LA) occurring on the order of minutes to days following FC. Our present study tested the hypothesis that FC leads to long-lasting changes in the local circuitry of the rat LA. To test this hypothesis we performed microinjections in individual LA neurons from FC and naïve rats following a three week recovery. LA neurons were then analyzed both in terms of their overall morphology, as well as in terms of their spine density and size using high resolution 3D imaging and analysis. We found that, compared to control rats, FC rats had reduced proximal dendritic length and a 22% decrease in total spine density. Interestingly, remaining spines had shorter distances to the nearest neighboring spines (i.e. were more clustered) than the spines from control animals, an effect that could not be replicated by simulation of random spine loss. To test how pruning results in the observed increased clustering, we simulated spine loss from our naïve dendrites using varying weights for several “protective factors”, such as protection for spines within clusters, protection for large spines and protection for spines residing on dense dendrites. When spine distributions from simulations were compared to the spine distribution from FC dendrites, we found that the primary factor resulting in increase clustering originates from selective pruning of spines on low density dendrites. In summary, FC leads to circuit-specific spine pruning in the rat LA following three weeks of recovery, with spine loss occurring selectively on low density dendrites and resulting in an effective increase in spine clustering.
Support: NIH F30 MH083402
NIH P50 MH58911