Literature DB >> 15936681

Deletion of the mu opioid receptor results in impaired acquisition of Pavlovian context fear.

Matthew J Sanders1, Brigitte L Kieffer, Michael S Fanselow.   

Abstract

The mu opioid receptor may constitute a critical component of a negative feedback system that regulates Pavlovian fear conditioning. We investigated context fear conditioning acquisition and expression in mu opioid receptor knockout mice (on an inbred, C57 genetic background). We discovered that the mu receptor knockout results in an unexpected and significant deficit in context fear acquisition. Mice lacking the mu receptor showed normal fear acquisition when subjected to a 1-day fear conditioning protocol but evinced deficient fear learning when acquisition was conducted across 5 days. The knockout mice showed normal reactivity to footshock in both fear conditioning protocols. Finally, we confirmed the effectiveness of the receptor deletion in the C57 strain by subjecting the mice to a test of morphine analgesia in the hot-plate assay. As has been seen with mixed genetic background, the receptor deletion resulted in a complete lack of analgesic response to 10 mg/kg morphine. Surprisingly, mice with a single copy of the mu receptor gene (heterozygous knockouts) showed intact sensitivity to morphine but a significant deficit in Pavlovian fear conditioning. The results indicate that deletion of the mu receptor gene impairs fear conditioning and that the conditioning and analgesia effects of heterozygous deletion are dissociable. The conditioning deficit seen in this line of mice may be related to impairment in hippocampus function.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15936681     DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2005.03.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem        ISSN: 1074-7427            Impact factor:   2.877


  10 in total

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-01-05       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 5.  Usefulness of knockout mice to clarify the role of the opioid system in chronic pain.

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6.  Knockout of the mu opioid receptor enhances the survival of adult-generated hippocampal granule cell neurons.

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Review 8.  Targeting opioid dysregulation in depression for the development of novel therapeutics.

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Authors:  Ania L Gheyara; Ravikumar Ponnusamy; Biljana Djukic; Ryan J Craft; Kaitlyn Ho; Weikun Guo; Mariel M Finucane; Pascal E Sanchez; Lennart Mucke
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10.  Tau reduction diminishes spatial learning and memory deficits after mild repetitive traumatic brain injury in mice.

Authors:  Jason S Cheng; Ryan Craft; Gui-Qiu Yu; Kaitlyn Ho; Xin Wang; Geetha Mohan; Sergey Mangnitsky; Ravikumar Ponnusamy; Lennart Mucke
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  10 in total

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