| Literature DB >> 28275342 |
Isabel C Zbukvic1, Chun Hui J Park1, Despina E Ganella1, Andrew J Lawrence1, Jee Hyun Kim1.
Abstract
Adolescents with anxiety disorders attain poorer outcomes following extinction-based treatment compared to adults. Extinction deficit during adolescence has been identified to involve immaturity in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Findings from adult rodents suggest extinction involves dopamine signaling in the mPFC. This system changes dramatically during adolescence, but its role in adolescent extinction is unknown. Therefore, we investigated the role of prefrontal dopamine in extinction using Pavlovian fear conditioning in adolescent and adult rats. Using quantitative PCR (qPCR) analyses, we measured changes in dopamine receptor gene expression in the mPFC before and after extinction. We then enhanced dopamine 1 receptor (D1R) or dopamine 2 receptor (D2R) signaling in the infralimbic cortex (IL) of the mPFC using agonists at the time of extinction. Adolescent rats displayed a deficit in extinction retention compared to adults. Extinction induced a reduction in D1R compared to D2R gene expression in adolescent rats, whereas an increase of D1R compared to D2R gene expression was observed in adult rats. Acutely enhancing IL D1R signaling using SKF-81297 had no effect on extinction at either age. In contrast, acutely enhancing IL D2R signaling with quinpirole significantly enhanced long-term extinction in adolescents, and impaired within-session extinction in adults. Our results suggest a dissociated role for prefrontal dopamine in fear extinction during adolescence compared to adulthood. Findings highlight the dopamine system as a potential pharmacological target to improve extinction-based treatments for adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; conditioning; dopamine; extinction; fear; prefrontal cortex
Year: 2017 PMID: 28275342 PMCID: PMC5319962 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Long-term extinction was impaired in adolescent rats compared to adult rats despite comparable within-session extinction. Adolescents n = 11, adults n = 13. (A) Adolescents and adults showed comparable conditioned stimulus (CS)-elicited freezing during fear conditioning. (B) Adolescent and adult rats showed a similar decrease in CS-elicited freezing over extinction. (C) Adolescents reinstated CS-elicited freezing 24 h after extinction training, characteristic of a deficit in long-term extinction at this age. Adult rats maintained low levels of CS-elicited freezing when tested 24 h after extinction training. Data represent mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05.
Figure 2Prefrontal dopamine receptor gene expression differed for adolescent and adult rats before and after extinction. Adolescents n = 8, adults n = 12. (A) Adolescents and adults showed an increase in CS-elicited freezing over repeated pairings of the CS (tone) and the unconditioned stimulus (US; foot shock). (B) Adolescents and adults that received extinction training showed a similar decrease in within-session CS-elicited freezing. (C) Coronal section illustrating medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) collected for quantitative PCR (qPCR) analyses. Section within broken line indicates microdissected tissue. (D) Pre-extinction prefrontal dopamine 1 receptor (D1R) gene expression was higher in adolescents compared to adults. (E) There were no differences in prefrontal dopamine 2 receptor (D2R) gene expression prior to extinction. (F) Pre-extinction prefrontal D1R/D2R ratio was higher in adolescents compared to adults. (G) There were no changes in prefrontal D1R or (H) D2R gene expression following extinction, however (I) D1R/D2R ratio was significantly downregulated in adolescents and upregulated in adults following extinction. Data represent mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05.
Figure 3Intra-infralimbic cortex (IL) infusions of a D1R agonist (SKF-81297) or a D2R agonist (quinpirole) had different effects on within-session and long-term extinction for adolescent and adult rats. (A) Coronal sections illustrating intracranial cannula placements in adolescents (left) and adults (right). Bilateral cannula targeted the IL. Hits (filled circles; adolescents n = 36, adults n = 41) and misses (empty circles; adolescents n = 6, adults n = 15). (B) Adolescents displayed an increase in CS-elicited freezing across fear conditioning. (C) Acutely manipulating IL D1R or D2R signaling had no effect on adolescent extinction within-session, with all rats showing initial high levels of CS-elicited freezing that decreased as the extinction proceeded. (D) Adolescents that received in intra-IL vehicle or SKF-81297 at the time of extinction returned to high levels of CS-elicited freezing when tested the next day, while adolescents that received intra-IL quinpirole did not. (E) Adults displayed an increase in CS-elicited freezing across fear conditioning. (F) Acutely manipulating adult IL D2R signaling transiently impaired within-session extinction, however all adult rats inhibited CS-elicited freezing to a comparable level by the end of extinction training, irrespective of intracranial drug treatment. (G) Enhancing IL D1R or D2R signaling at the time of extinction training had no effect on long-term extinction in adults. Data represent mean ± SEM. *p < 0.05.