4.8 Article

Breathing-driven prefrontal oscillations regulate maintenance of conditioned-fear evoked freezing independently of initiation

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22798-6

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资金

  1. Fondation pour la Recherche sur le Cerveau [AP FRC 2016]
  2. French National Agency for Research [ANR-12BSV4-0013-02, ANR-16-CE37-0001]
  3. CNRS: ATIP-Avenir (2014)
  4. city of Paris (Grant Emergence 2014)
  5. program Investissements d'Avenir [ANR-10-LABX-54, ANR-11-IDEX-0001-02]
  6. ERC [ERC-CoG-726169-MNEMOSYNE]
  7. Ministere de l'Enseignement Superieur et de la Recherche, France
  8. ENS-Ulm, PSL Research University
  9. Fondation Pour la Recherche Medicale, France

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Brain-body interactions play an important role in emotions, with the olfactory bulb transmitting 4 Hz breathing rhythm to the prefrontal cortex to regulate freezing maintenance during fear-related behavior in mice.
Brain-body interactions are thought to be essential in emotions but their physiological basis remains poorly understood. In mice, regular 4 Hz breathing appears during freezing after cue-fear conditioning. Here we show that the olfactory bulb (OB) transmits this rhythm to the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) where it organizes neural activity. Reduction of the respiratory-related 4 Hz oscillation, via bulbectomy or optogenetic perturbation of the OB, reduces freezing. Behavioural modelling shows that this is due to a specific reduction in freezing maintenance without impacting its initiation, thus dissociating these two phenomena. dmPFC LFP and firing patterns support the region's specific function in freezing maintenance. In particular, population analysis reveals that network activity tracks 4 Hz power dynamics during freezing and reaches a stable state at 4 Hz peak that lasts until freezing termination. These results provide a potential mechanism and a functional role for bodily feedback in emotions and therefore shed light on the historical James-Cannon debate. Combining optogenetics, behavioral modelling and neural population analysis, the authors show in mice that during fear-related freezing the olfactory bulb transmits 4 Hz breathing rhythm to the prefrontal cortex where this oscillation organizes local activity and regulates freezing episode duration.

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