The lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA) is a crucial part of the
neural circuit underlying auditory fear conditioning where a tone
conditioned stimulus (CS) is paired with a shock unconditioned stimulus
(US). The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) has also been implicated
in fear conditioning, especially in the regulation of amygdala activity.
CS-evoked response during fear learning in LA is positively and
in mPFC is inversely correlated to freezing behavior. To further
investigate the role of LA and mPFC in control of fear behavior,
we designed a task where rats received an auditory CS (12KHz tone
pips, 80 dB, 20 sec) paired with a weak para-orbital shock US. The
CS-US pairing occurs with a 20% probability, and training continues
for multiple days to establish a well-learned CS-US association.
The rats had free access to Koolaid during the task, and the degree
of CS-suppressed licking was the measure of conditioned fear. During
the task, single unit activity was recorded in the LA and mPFC via
implanted electrodes. CS-evoked responses of single neurons were
compared when rats were licking vs. when licking was suppressed
by the CS. Preliminary data suggest that neurons in LA and mPFC
are correlated with behavior. The CS-evoked response in LA and mPFC
is respectively larger and smaller when the rat is suppressing to
the tone (thus expressing fear) than when the rat is licking during
the tone (not expressing fear). These data suggest that cells in
the LA and mPFC encode a representation of the CS-US relationship
that depends on the motivational state and behavior of the animal.
Supported by: MH3877; J.C.E is an HHMI Pre-Doctoral Fellow
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