Literature DB >> 34242811

Corticosterone differentially modulates time-dependent fear generalization following mild or moderate fear conditioning training in rats.

Moisés Dos Santos Corrêa1, Barbara Dos Santos Vaz2, Beatriz Scazufca Menezes3, Tatiana Lima Ferreira4, Paula Ayako Tiba5, Raquel Vecchio Fornari6.   

Abstract

Stressful and emotionally arousing experiences create strong memories that seem to lose specificity over time. It is uncertain, however, how the stress system contributes to the phenomenon of time-dependent fear generalization. Here, we investigated whether post-training corticosterone (CORT-HBC) injections, given after different training intensities, affect contextual fear memory specificity at several time points. We trained male Wistar rats on the contextual fear conditioning (CFC) task using two footshock intensities (mild CFC, 3 footshocks of 0.3 mA, or moderate CFC, 3x 0.6 mA) and immediately after the training session we administered CORT-HBC systemically. We first tested the animals in a novel context and then in the training context at different intervals following training (2, 14, 28 or 42 days). By measuring freezing in the novel context and then contrasting freezing times shown in both contexts, we inferred contextual fear generalization for each rat, classifying them into Generalizers or Discriminators. Following mild CFC training, the glucocorticoid injection promoted an accurate contextual memory at the recent time point (2 days), and increase the contextual memory accuracy 28 days after training. In contrast, after the moderate CFC training, CORT-HBC facilitated contextual generalization at 14 days, compared to the control group that maintained contextual discrimination at this timepoint. For this training intensity, however, CORT-HBC did not have any effect on recent memory specificity. These findings indicate that treatment with CORT-HBC immediately after the encoding of mild or moderately arousing experiences may differentially modulate memory consolidation and time-dependent fear generalization.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  Arousal; Discrimination; Emotional memory; Glucocorticoids; Specificity; Stress

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34242811     DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2021.107487

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


  1 in total

1.  Remote contextual fear retrieval engages activity from salience network regions in rats.

Authors:  Moisés Dos Santos Corrêa; Gabriel David Vieira Grisanti; Isabelle Anjos Fernandes Franciscatto; Tatiana Suemi Anglas Tarumoto; Paula Ayako Tiba; Tatiana Lima Ferreira; Raquel Vecchio Fornari
Journal:  Neurobiol Stress       Date:  2022-05-09
  1 in total

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