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Publication : Central amygdala micro-circuits mediate fear extinction.

First Author  Whittle N Year  2021
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  12
Issue  1 Pages  4156
PubMed ID  34230461 Mgi Jnum  J:312136
Mgi Id  MGI:6725624 Doi  10.1038/s41467-021-24068-x
Citation  Whittle N, et al. (2021) Central amygdala micro-circuits mediate fear extinction. Nat Commun 12(1):4156
abstractText  Fear extinction is an adaptive process whereby defensive responses are attenuated following repeated experience of prior fear-related stimuli without harm. The formation of extinction memories involves interactions between various corticolimbic structures, resulting in reduced central amygdala (CEA) output. Recent studies show, however, the CEA is not merely an output relay of fear responses but contains multiple neuronal subpopulations that interact to calibrate levels of fear responding. Here, by integrating behavioural, in vivo electrophysiological, anatomical and optogenetic approaches in mice we demonstrate that fear extinction produces reversible, stimulus- and context-specific changes in neuronal responses to conditioned stimuli in functionally and genetically defined cell types in the lateral (CEl) and medial (CEm) CEA. Moreover, we show these alterations are absent when extinction is deficient and that selective silencing of protein kinase C delta-expressing (PKCdelta) CEl neurons impairs fear extinction. Our findings identify CEA inhibitory microcircuits that act as critical elements within the brain networks mediating fear extinction.
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