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Publication : Anti-Hebbian plasticity in the motor cortex promotes defensive freezing.

First Author  Bai Y Year  2023
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  33
Issue  16 Pages  3465-3477.e5
PubMed ID  37543035 Mgi Jnum  J:339636
Mgi Id  MGI:7523753 Doi  10.1016/j.cub.2023.07.021
Citation  Bai Y, et al. (2023) Anti-Hebbian plasticity in the motor cortex promotes defensive freezing. Curr Biol 33(16):3465-3477.e5
abstractText  Regional brain activity often decreases from baseline levels in response to external events, but how neurons develop such negative responses is unclear. To study this, we leveraged the negative response that develops in the primary motor cortex (M1) after classical fear learning. We trained mice with a fear conditioning paradigm while imaging their brains with standard two-photon microscopy. This enabled monitoring changes in neuronal responses to the tone with synaptic resolution through learning. We found that M1 layer 5 pyramidal neurons (L5 PNs) developed negative tone responses within an hour after conditioning, which depended on the weakening of their dendritic spines that were active during training. Blocking this form of anti-Hebbian plasticity using an optogenetic manipulation of CaMKII activity disrupted negative tone responses and freezing. Therefore, reducing the strength of spines active at the time of memory encoding leads to negative responses of L5 PNs. In turn, these negative responses curb M1's capacity for promoting movement, thereby aiding freezing. Collectively, this work provides a mechanistic understanding of how area-specific negative responses to behaviorally relevant cues can be achieved.
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