Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes

Maladaptive fear, such as fear that is persistent or easily generalized to a nonthreatening stimuli, is associated with anxiety-related disorders in humans. In the laboratory, maladaptive fear can be modeled in rodents using Pavlovian fear conditioning. Recently, an inbred mouse strain known as 129...

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Main Authors: Stephanie J Temme, Ryan Z Bell, Reciton ePahumi, Geoffrey G Murphy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00282/full
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spelling doaj-27bdc0a6149d4f03bccfa96d98b267d42020-11-24T23:48:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience1662-51532014-08-01810.3389/fnbeh.2014.00282102350Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypesStephanie J Temme0Ryan Z Bell1Reciton ePahumi2Geoffrey G Murphy3Geoffrey G Murphy4Geoffrey G Murphy5University of MichiganUniversity of MichiganUniversity of MichiganUniversity of MichiganUniversity of MichiganUniversity of MichiganMaladaptive fear, such as fear that is persistent or easily generalized to a nonthreatening stimuli, is associated with anxiety-related disorders in humans. In the laboratory, maladaptive fear can be modeled in rodents using Pavlovian fear conditioning. Recently, an inbred mouse strain known as 129S1/SvImJ, or 129S1 have been reported as exhibiting impairments in fear extinction and enhanced fear generalization. With a long-term goal of identifying segregating genetic markers of maladaptive fear, we used Pavlovian fear conditioning to characterize a closely related substrain designated as 129S6/SvEvTac, or 129S6. Here we report that, like 129S1 animals, 129S6 mice exhibit appropriate levels of fear upon conditioning, but are unable to extinguish fear memories once they are consolidated. Importantly, the maladaptive fear phenotype in this inbred stain can be segregated by sub-strain when probed using conditioning protocols designed to assess generalized fear. We find that unlike the 129S1 substrain, mice from the 129S6 sub-strain do not generalize conditioned fear to previously novel contexts and can learn to discriminate between two similar contexts when trained using a discrimination protocol. These results suggest that at least two forms of maladaptive fear (deficits in fear extinction and fear generalization) can be can be functionally segregated, further suggesting that the underlying neurobiology is heritable. Given the observation that two closely related sub-strains can exhibit different constellations of maladaptive fear suggests that these findings could be exploited to facilitate the identification of candidate genes for anxiety-related disorders.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00282/fullextinctiongeneralizationcontext discriminationinbred mouse strainsconditioned fearmaladaptive fear
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephanie J Temme
Ryan Z Bell
Reciton ePahumi
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
spellingShingle Stephanie J Temme
Ryan Z Bell
Reciton ePahumi
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
extinction
generalization
context discrimination
inbred mouse strains
conditioned fear
maladaptive fear
author_facet Stephanie J Temme
Ryan Z Bell
Reciton ePahumi
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
Geoffrey G Murphy
author_sort Stephanie J Temme
title Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
title_short Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
title_full Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
title_fullStr Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
title_sort comparison of inbred mouse substrains reveals segregation of maladaptive fear phenotypes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
issn 1662-5153
publishDate 2014-08-01
description Maladaptive fear, such as fear that is persistent or easily generalized to a nonthreatening stimuli, is associated with anxiety-related disorders in humans. In the laboratory, maladaptive fear can be modeled in rodents using Pavlovian fear conditioning. Recently, an inbred mouse strain known as 129S1/SvImJ, or 129S1 have been reported as exhibiting impairments in fear extinction and enhanced fear generalization. With a long-term goal of identifying segregating genetic markers of maladaptive fear, we used Pavlovian fear conditioning to characterize a closely related substrain designated as 129S6/SvEvTac, or 129S6. Here we report that, like 129S1 animals, 129S6 mice exhibit appropriate levels of fear upon conditioning, but are unable to extinguish fear memories once they are consolidated. Importantly, the maladaptive fear phenotype in this inbred stain can be segregated by sub-strain when probed using conditioning protocols designed to assess generalized fear. We find that unlike the 129S1 substrain, mice from the 129S6 sub-strain do not generalize conditioned fear to previously novel contexts and can learn to discriminate between two similar contexts when trained using a discrimination protocol. These results suggest that at least two forms of maladaptive fear (deficits in fear extinction and fear generalization) can be can be functionally segregated, further suggesting that the underlying neurobiology is heritable. Given the observation that two closely related sub-strains can exhibit different constellations of maladaptive fear suggests that these findings could be exploited to facilitate the identification of candidate genes for anxiety-related disorders.
topic extinction
generalization
context discrimination
inbred mouse strains
conditioned fear
maladaptive fear
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00282/full
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