Observational fear enhanced plasticity in dmPFC-BLA circuit as a modulator of affective behaviors

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $400,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project summary Forming stronger aversive memories is a characteristic of PTSD. Meanwhile, psychological trauma is a risk factor for developing PTSD in the future, upon exposure to another adverse event. This project will use mice to investigate how observing fear in others, as a form of social distress, enhances the retention of new inhibitory avoidance (IA) memories. It serves our long- term goal to understand how neuronal plasticity contributes to emotional behaviors and to identify the means for reversing PTSD-relevant behavioral traits by artificial circuit manipulations. We have recently found that a brief exposure to a conspecific receiving electrical footshocks, the observational fear paradigm (OF), enables a stronger inhibitory avoidance (IA) learning in mice. Our preliminary data strongly implicate the pathways between the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) and basolateral amygdala (BLA) pathway in the enhancement. First, a pharmacogenetic disconnection of these structures during OF prevented the enhancement. Second, OF enabled facilitation of this pathway by IA training, which lasted for several hours. Third, OF generated NMDAR-only (silent) synapses, which we unsilenced by IA training. In addition, OF attenuated GABAbR-mediated depression of the feedforward GABAergic currents, evoked in BLA neurons by a 5 Hz repeated stimulation of the dmPFC inputs. We will test a hypothesis that OF enhances IA by generating silent synapses and by altering the GABAbR- dependent inhibitory balance between PV- and Sst-IN in the prefrontal-amygdala circuit, both of which enable a stronger synaptic facilitation during IA training. We will determine the necessity of dmPFC-BLA synapses at each phase of the OF-IA paradigm (Aim 1), test the causal role of the silent synapses and the transient synaptic facilitation (Aim 2), and identify the micro-circuit mechanism responsible for the abnormally high plasticity (Aim 3). The study may inform about potential targets and methods for early intervention to prevent PTSD in traumatized people.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10159754
Project number
5R01MH120290-03
Recipient
VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INST AND ST UNIV
Principal Investigator
Alexei Morozov
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$400,000
Award type
5
Project period
2019-07-05 → 2024-04-30