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Publication : Fear-related behaviors in Lurcher mutant mice exposed to a predator.

First Author  Lorivel T Year  2014
Journal  Genes Brain Behav Volume  13
Issue  8 Pages  794-801
PubMed ID  25155577 Mgi Jnum  J:226730
Mgi Id  MGI:5698330 Doi  10.1111/gbb.12173
Citation  Lorivel T, et al. (2014) Fear-related behaviors in Lurcher mutant mice exposed to a predator. Genes Brain Behav 13(8):794-801
abstractText  The Lurcher mutant mice are characterized by massive cerebellar cortex degeneration. Besides their motor and cognitive disturbances, they exhibit both exaggerated blood corticosterone (CORT) level surge and behavioral disinhibition when confronted to anxiogenic conditions (i.e. to a potential threat). In this study, we assessed if such physiological and behavioral hyperactivity was also detectable in a fear-eliciting situation (actual threat). For this purpose, the behaviors and CORT level elevations in Lurcher mice were compared with those of littermate controls in the predator exposure test: mice were exposed either to a rat (exposure) or to a brief wave of the experimenter's hand (sham exposure). While the basal CORT concentrations (24 h before testing) were not significantly different between mice of both genotypes, the post-exposure ones were higher in Lurcher than in control mice whatever the condition of the experimental design (exposure or sham exposure). Predator exposure did not provoke significant increase of CORT levels whatever the genotype. On the contrary, our data clearly showed that fear-related behaviors of cerebellar mutants facing a real threat were exacerbated in comparison to those of control mice. These results suggest that the cerebellar cortex not only participates to fear conditioning and anxiety but also actively contributes to the modulation of the innate fear-related behaviors.
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