4.4 Article

Dissociable roles of the nucleus accumbens core and shell subregions in the expression and extinction of conditioned fear

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF STRESS
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100365

Keywords

Pavlovian fear conditioning; mGluR1; ERK; Extinction

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R15MH118705]

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The research highlights the different roles of the NAcC in fear expression and the NAcS in fear extinction. Inactivation experiments demonstrated the necessity of NAcC for fear expression and NAcS for extinction consolidation. In addition, inactivation of mGluR1 or ERK signaling in the NAcS disrupted extinction consolidation, suggesting the importance of the ERK/MAPK pathway in this process.
The nucleus accumbens (NAc), consisting of core (NAcC) and shell (NAcS) sub-regions, has primarily been studied as a locus mediating the effects of drug reward and addiction. However, there is ample evidence that this region is also involved in regulating aversive responses, but the exact role of the NAc and its subregions in regulating associative fear processing remains unclear. Here, we investigated the specific contribution of the NAcC and NAcS in regulating both fear expression and fear extinction in C57BL/6J mice. Using Arc expression as an indicator of neuronal activity, we first show that the NAcC is specifically active only in response to an associative fear cue during an expression test. In contrast, the NAcS is specifically active during fear extinction. We next inactivated each subregion using lidocaine and demonstrated that the NAcC is necessary for fear expression, but not for extinction learning or consolidation of extinction. In contrast, we demonstrate that the NAcS is necessary for the consolidation of extinction, but not fear expression or extinction learning. Further, inactivation of mGluR1 or ERK signaling specifically in the NAcS disrupted the consolidation of extinction but had no effect on fear expression or extinction learning itself. Our data provide the first evidence for the importance of the ERK/MAPK pathway as the underlying neural mechanism facilitating extinction consolidation within the NAcS. These findings suggest that the NAc subregions play dissociable roles in regulating fear recall and the consolidation of fear extinction, and potentially implicate them as critical regions within the canonical fear circuit.

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