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Encoding of contextual fear memory in hippocampal-amygdala circuit

Psychology

Encoding of contextual fear memory in hippocampal-amygdala circuit

W. B. Kim and J. Cho

This groundbreaking study by Woong Bin Kim and Jun-Hyeong Cho explores how the hippocampal-amygdala pathway encodes contextual fear memory. By revealing the crucial role of ventral CA1 projections to the basal amygdala in fear conditioning, the researchers show how specific synaptic strengthening leads to adaptive fear memory encoding.... show more
Abstract
In contextual fear conditioning, experimental subjects learn to associate a neutral context with an aversive stimulus and display fear responses to a context that predicts danger. Although the hippocampal-amygdala pathway has been implicated in the retrieval of contextual fear memory, the mechanism by which fear memory is encoded in this circuit has not been investigated. Here, we show that activity in the ventral CA1 (vCA1) hippocampal projections to the basal amygdala (BA), paired with aversive stimuli, contributes to encoding conditioned fear memory. Contextual fear conditioning induced selective strengthening of a subset of vCA1-BA synapses, which was prevented under anisomycin-induced retrograde amnesia. Moreover, a subpopulation of BA neurons receives stronger monosynaptic inputs from context-responding vCA1 neurons, whose activity was required for contextual fear learning and synaptic potentiation in the vCA1-BA pathway. Our study suggests that synaptic strengthening of vCA1 inputs conveying contextual information to a subset of BA neurons contributes to encoding adaptive fear memory for the threat-predictive context.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 13, 2020
Authors
Woong Bin Kim, Jun-Hyeong Cho
Tags
contextual fear memory
hippocampal-amygdala pathway
ventral CA1
basal amygdala
synaptic potentiation
fear conditioning
neuroscience
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