4.0 Article

Trace Fear Conditioning: Procedure for Assessing Complex Hippocampal Function in Mice

Journal

BIO-PROTOCOL
Volume 8, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

BIO-PROTOCOL
DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2475

Keywords

Trace fear conditioning (TFC); Contextual memory; Hippocampus function; Memory enhancement; Learning and memory deficits

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Funding

  1. Israeli Ministry of Science, Technology, and Space [MOST 3-12080]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [ISF 1003/12, ISF-IDRC 2395/2015]
  3. Wolfson Charitable Trust
  4. Israeli Planning and Budgeting Committee Program Fellowships for Outstanding Post-Doctoral Fellows from China and India
  5. Ministry of Science and Technology (Eshkol post-doctoral fellowship)
  6. Tauber foundation fellowship

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The trace fear conditioning protocol is designed to measure hippocampal function in mice. The protocol includes a neutral conditioned stimulus (tone) and an aversive unconditioned stimulus (shock), separated in time by a trace interval. The trace interval between the tone and the shock critically involves the hippocampus and could be used to evaluate hippocampal-dependent learning and memory. In this protocol, we presented mice with five pairings of tone and shock separated by a 20 sec trace interval. Freezing was measured 24 h after conditioning to evaluate contextual memory by placing mice in the conditioned chamber. In addition, 48 h after conditioning, freezing was measured in a dark chamber, which served as a different context. This method enables precise detection of hippocampal-dependent learning and memory following pharmacological and genetic manipulations that impair or enhance hippocampal function.

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