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Publication : A Central Amygdala CRF Circuit Facilitates Learning about Weak Threats.

First Author  Sanford CA Year  2017
Journal  Neuron Volume  93
Issue  1 Pages  164-178
PubMed ID  28017470 Mgi Jnum  J:253267
Mgi Id  MGI:6109547 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2016.11.034
Citation  Sanford CA, et al. (2017) A Central Amygdala CRF Circuit Facilitates Learning about Weak Threats. Neuron 93(1):164-178
abstractText  Fear is a graded central motive state ranging from mild to intense. As threat intensity increases, fear transitions from discriminative to generalized. The circuit mechanisms that process threats of different intensity are not well resolved. Here, we isolate a unique population of locally projecting neurons in the central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA) that produce the neuropeptide corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF). CRF-producing neurons and CRF in the CeA are required for discriminative fear, but both are dispensable for generalized fear at high US intensities. Consistent with a role in discriminative fear, CRF neurons undergo plasticity following threat conditioning and selectively respond to threat-predictive cues. We further show that excitability of genetically isolated CRF-receptive (CRFR1) neurons in the CeA is potently enhanced by CRF and that CRFR1 signaling in the CeA is critical for discriminative fear. These findings demonstrate a novel CRF gain-control circuit and show separable pathways for graded fear processing.
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