| Literature DB >> 32038188 |
Carolina Macêdo-Souza1, Silvia S Maisonnette1, Claudio C Filgueiras2, J Landeira-Fernandez1, Thomas E Krahe1.
Abstract
Anxiety disorders (AD) comprise a broad range of psychiatric conditions, including general anxiety (GAD) and specific phobias. For the last decades, the use of animal models of anxiety has offered important insights into the understanding of the association between these psychopathologies. Here, we investigate whether Carioca high- and low-conditioned freezing rats (CHF and CLF, respectively), a GAD animal model of anxiety, show similar high- and low-freezing behavioral phenotypes for cued auditory fear conditioning. Adult CHF (n = 16), CLF (n = 16) and normal age-matched Wistar rats (control, CTL, n = 16) were tested in a classical auditory-cued fear conditioning paradigm over 3 days (Tone + Shock and Tone only groups, n = 8 per treatment). Freezing responses were measured and used as evidence of fear conditioning. Overall, both CHF and CLF rats, as well as CTL animals displayed fear conditioning to the auditory CS. However, CLF animals showed a rapid extinction to the auditory conditioned stimulus compared to CHF and CTL rats. We discuss these findings in the context of the behavioral and neuronal differences observed in rodent lines of high and low anxiety traits.Entities:
Keywords: GAD; animal models of anxiety; anxiety disorders; aversive learning; carioca high and low conditioned freezing lines; cued fear
Year: 2020 PMID: 32038188 PMCID: PMC6992609 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2019.00285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Cued fear conditioning in Carioca high-conditioned freezing (CHF), Carioca low-conditioned freezing (CLF), and control (CTL) animals. (A–C) Graphs showing the average freezing responses (in %) for each day. In (D–F), freezing responses (also in %) are depicted across the same days and conditions along 1-min intervals (see “Materials and Methods” section). Also in (D–F), top row panels illustrate responses of rats that on day 1 were exposed to both acoustic and foot shock stimuli (Tone + Shock groups), whereas bottom row panels depict responses of animals that on day 1 were only exposed to the acoustic stimulus (Tone only groups). Shaded areas portray baseline periods with no stimulus presentations (tone or tone accompanied by foot shocks). Note that no significant differences in freezing were found for all Tone + Shock group comparisons in the first minute of the CS retention trial (day 3, upward-pointing arrow, right top panel). BL, baseline; CS, conditioned stimuli; CTX, context. Bars and symbols are means ± SEM. In (A–C), Bonferroni post hoc tests, *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001. In (D–F), Bonferroni post hoc tests, CHF vs. CTL, *P < 0.05; CHF vs. CLF, #P < 0.05; CTL vs. CLF, +P < 0.05.
Figure 2Effect of context on the freezing responses of CHF, CLF, and control (CTL) rats. (A,B) Graphs illustrating the average freezing responses (in %) of animal groups 24 h after context fear conditioning for the whole session (A) and within 1-min intervals (B). The shaded area indicates baseline period with no foot shock stimulus presentation (day 1, see Supplementary Material). Bars and symbols are means ± SEM. In (A), Bonferroni post hoc tests, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001. In (B), Bonferroni post hoc tests, CHF vs. CTL, *P < 0.05; CHF vs. CLF, #P < 0.05; CTL vs. CLF, +P < 0.05.