Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex

There is a great deal of individual variability in the emotional outcomes of potentially traumatic events, and the underlying mechanisms are only beginning to be understood. In order to further our understanding of individual trajectories to trauma, its vulnerability and resilience, we adapted a mod...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Guillaume L. Poirier, Natsuko Hitora-Imamura, Carmen Sandi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-12-01
Series:Neurobiology of Stress
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300157
id doaj-6b2585f474c7497195cd8f794d2d7069
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6b2585f474c7497195cd8f794d2d70692020-11-24T21:03:42ZengElsevierNeurobiology of Stress2352-28952016-12-015C1710.1016/j.ynstr.2016.08.005Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortexGuillaume L. PoirierNatsuko Hitora-ImamuraCarmen SandiThere is a great deal of individual variability in the emotional outcomes of potentially traumatic events, and the underlying mechanisms are only beginning to be understood. In order to further our understanding of individual trajectories to trauma, its vulnerability and resilience, we adapted a model of fear expression to ambiguous vs perfect cues in adult male rats, and examined long-term fear extinction, 2, 3, and 50 days from acquisition. After the final conditioned fear test, mitochondrial enzyme monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) function was examined. In order to identify associations between this function and behavioral expression, an a posteri median segregation approach was adopted, and animals were classified as high or low responding according to level of freezing to the ambiguous cue at remote testing, long after the initial extinction. Those individuals characterized by their higher response showed a freezing pattern that persisted from their previous extinction sessions, in spite of their acquisition levels being equivalent to the low-freezing group. Furthermore, unlike more adaptive individuals, freezing levels of high-freezing animals even increased at initial extinction, to almost double their acquisition session levels. Controlling for perfect cue response at remote extinction, greater ambiguous threat cue response was associated with enhanced prelimbic cortex MAOA functional activity. These findings underscore MAOA as a potential target for the development of interventions to mitigate the impact of traumatic experiences.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300157AdversityStressVulnerabilityResiliencePersonalityPost-traumatic stress disorder
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guillaume L. Poirier
Natsuko Hitora-Imamura
Carmen Sandi
spellingShingle Guillaume L. Poirier
Natsuko Hitora-Imamura
Carmen Sandi
Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
Neurobiology of Stress
Adversity
Stress
Vulnerability
Resilience
Personality
Post-traumatic stress disorder
author_facet Guillaume L. Poirier
Natsuko Hitora-Imamura
Carmen Sandi
author_sort Guillaume L. Poirier
title Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
title_short Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
title_full Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
title_fullStr Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
title_full_unstemmed Emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high MAOA activity in the prelimbic cortex
title_sort emergence in extinction of enhanced and persistent responding to ambiguous aversive cues is associated with high maoa activity in the prelimbic cortex
publisher Elsevier
series Neurobiology of Stress
issn 2352-2895
publishDate 2016-12-01
description There is a great deal of individual variability in the emotional outcomes of potentially traumatic events, and the underlying mechanisms are only beginning to be understood. In order to further our understanding of individual trajectories to trauma, its vulnerability and resilience, we adapted a model of fear expression to ambiguous vs perfect cues in adult male rats, and examined long-term fear extinction, 2, 3, and 50 days from acquisition. After the final conditioned fear test, mitochondrial enzyme monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) function was examined. In order to identify associations between this function and behavioral expression, an a posteri median segregation approach was adopted, and animals were classified as high or low responding according to level of freezing to the ambiguous cue at remote testing, long after the initial extinction. Those individuals characterized by their higher response showed a freezing pattern that persisted from their previous extinction sessions, in spite of their acquisition levels being equivalent to the low-freezing group. Furthermore, unlike more adaptive individuals, freezing levels of high-freezing animals even increased at initial extinction, to almost double their acquisition session levels. Controlling for perfect cue response at remote extinction, greater ambiguous threat cue response was associated with enhanced prelimbic cortex MAOA functional activity. These findings underscore MAOA as a potential target for the development of interventions to mitigate the impact of traumatic experiences.
topic Adversity
Stress
Vulnerability
Resilience
Personality
Post-traumatic stress disorder
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352289516300157
work_keys_str_mv AT guillaumelpoirier emergenceinextinctionofenhancedandpersistentrespondingtoambiguousaversivecuesisassociatedwithhighmaoaactivityintheprelimbiccortex
AT natsukohitoraimamura emergenceinextinctionofenhancedandpersistentrespondingtoambiguousaversivecuesisassociatedwithhighmaoaactivityintheprelimbiccortex
AT carmensandi emergenceinextinctionofenhancedandpersistentrespondingtoambiguousaversivecuesisassociatedwithhighmaoaactivityintheprelimbiccortex
_version_ 1716773336225153024