4.8 Article

Rapid Spatial Learning Controls Instinctive Defensive Behavior in Mice

期刊

CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 9, 页码 1342-1349

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.03.031

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资金

  1. Wellcome Trust/Royal Society Henry Dale Fellowship [098400/Z/12/Z]
  2. Medical Research Council (MRC) [MC-UP-1201/1]
  3. Wellcome Trust
  4. Gatsby Charitable Foundation SWC Fellowship
  5. MRC
  6. Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds
  7. Medical Research Council [MC_UP_1201/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. MRC [MC_UP_1201/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  9. Wellcome Trust [098400/Z/12/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Instinctive defensive behaviors are essential for animal survival. Across the animal kingdom, there are sensory stimuli that innately represent threat and trigger stereotyped behaviors such as escape or freezing [1-4]. While innate behaviors are considered to be hard-wired stimulus-responses [5], they act within dynamic environments, and factors such as the properties of the threat [6-9] and its perceived intensity [1, 10, 11], access to food sources [12-14], and expectations from past experience [15, 16] have been shown to influence defensive behaviors, suggesting that their expression can be modulated. However, despite recent work [2, 4, 17-21], little is known about how flexible mouse innate defensive behaviors are and how quickly they can be modified by experience. To address this, we have investigated the dependence of escape behavior on learned knowledge about the spatial environment and how the behavior is updated when the environment changes acutely. Using behavioral assays with innately threatening visual and auditory stimuli, we show that the primary goal of escape in mice is to reach a previously memorized shelter location. Memory of the escape target can be formed in a single shelter visit lasting less than 20 s, and changes in the spatial environment lead to a rapid update of the defensive action, including changing the defensive strategy from escape to freezing. Our results show that although there are innate links between specific sensory features and defensive behavior, instinctive defensive actions are surprisingly flexible and can be rapidly updated by experience to adapt to changing spatial environments.

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