4.7 Article

A thalamo-amygdalar circuit underlying the extinction of remote fear memories

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 7, Pages 964-974

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00856-y

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Funding

  1. EMBO long-term fellowship [ALT1605-2014, GA-2013-609409]
  2. UNAM-DGECI International Scholarship from the National Autonomous University of Mexico [DGECI/DG/DFI/SME/1731/2016]
  3. NENS Exchange Grant
  4. European Research Council [ERC-2015-StG 678832]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_155898]
  6. National Competence Center for Research (NCCR) SYNAPSY [51NF40-185897]
  7. Vallee Foundation [VS-2019-27]
  8. SNSF [31003A-176206]
  9. NCCR SYNAPSY [158776, 185897]
  10. MQ [MQ15FIP100012]
  11. NARSAD [24497]
  12. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_155898] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The research reveals that the extinction of remote fear memories depends on inputs from the thalamic nucleus reuniens (NRe) to the basolateral amygdala (BLA). Remote fear extinction activates NRe-to-BLA inputs and these pathways become potentiated upon fear reduction. Inhibition of the NRe impairs, while activation facilitates, remote fear extinction, indicating the crucial role of NRe in regulating BLA for extinction.
Silva et al. reveal distinct circuits for the extinction of remote fear memories, with the thalamic nucleus reuniens and its outputs to the basolateral amygdala taking center stage. Fear and trauma generate some of the longest-lived memories. Despite the corresponding need to understand how such memories can be attenuated, the underlying brain circuits remain unknown. Here, combining viral tracing, neuronal activity mapping, fiber photometry, chemogenetic and closed-loop optogenetic manipulations in mice, we show that the extinction of remote (30-day-old) fear memories depends on thalamic nucleus reuniens (NRe) inputs to the basolateral amygdala (BLA). We found that remote, but not recent (1-day-old), fear extinction activates NRe-to-BLA inputs, which become potentiated upon fear reduction. Furthermore, both monosynaptic NRe-to-BLA and total NRe activity increase shortly before freezing cessation, suggesting that the NRe registers and transmits safety signals to the BLA. Accordingly, pan-NRe and pathway-specific NRe-to-BLA inhibition impairs, whereas their activation facilitates, remote fear extinction. These findings identify the NRe as a crucial BLA regulator for extinction and provide the first functional description of the circuits underlying the attenuation of consolidated fear memories.

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