| Literature DB >> 35112315 |
Ann N Hoffman1,2,3, Jeremy M Trott4,5, Anna Makridis4, Michael S Fanselow4,5,6.
Abstract
In order to effectively thwart predation, antipredator defensive behaviors must be matched to the current spatio-temporal relationship to the predator. We have proposed a model where different defensive responses are organized along a predatory imminence continuum (PIC). The PIC is a behavior system organized as a sequence of innately programmed behavioral modes, each representing a different interaction with the predator or threat. Ranging from low threat to predator contact, the PIC categorizes defense modes as pre-encounter, post-encounter, and circa-strike, corresponding to states of anxiety, fear, and panic, respectively. This experiment examined if the same significant stressor caused overexpression of all defensive responses along the PIC, including anxiety-like behavior, freezing, and panic-like responses. Female and male mice were exposed to acute stress that consisted of a series of ten pseudorandomly presented unsignaled footshocks (or no shocks). Mice were subsequently tested on a battery of tasks to assess stress effects on pre-encounter (anxiety-like), post-encounter (fear), and circa-strike (panic-like) behaviors. Results revealed that following stress, mice exhibited increased anxiety-like behavior shown through reduced average velocity within a modified open field. Furthermore, stressed mice showed increased fear following a single footshock in a new context as well as an increase in reactivity to white noise in the original stress context, with stressed mice exhibiting a more robust circa-strike-like response than controls. Therefore, significant stress exposure influenced the defensive states of anxiety, fear, and panic across the predatory imminence continuum. This research could therefore reveal how such responses become maladaptive following traumatic stress in humans.Entities:
Keywords: Associative learning; Behavior systems; Defensive behavior; Fear conditioning; Nonassociative; Predatory imminence continuum
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35112315 PMCID: PMC9343476 DOI: 10.3758/s13420-021-00509-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Learn Behav ISSN: 1543-4494 Impact factor: 1.926
Fig. 1Experimental design. Day 1, Stress manipulation: 10 or 0 unsignaled footshocks over 60 min in Context A. Day 2, Pre-encounter defense: Light gradient open field. Days 3–4, Post-encounter defense: Single-shock fear conditioning and test in Context B. Day 5, Circa-strike defense: Reactivity to white noise in Context A
Fig. 2Pre-encounter defense: Light gradient open field. a A stress x time interaction revealed that prior stress decreased exploration velocity in the initial dark phase (*p = 0.015). b A main effect of sex revealed that female mice had higher velocity on average vs. males (*p = 0.018), regardless of stress history (black squares = No stress; red triangles = Stress)
Fig. 3Post-encounter defense: single shock fear conditioning. a The stressed group showed reduced shock reactivity to the single shock in context B (***p = 0.001). Open symbols represent females, closed symbols represent males although there were no significant sex effects or interactions. b Prior stress increased freezing during fear memory test the following day in context B; (**p = 0.003, main effect Stress vs. No stress)
Fig. 4Circa-strike defense: Reactivity to white noise in stress context. a The stressed group showed increased baseline freezing during the first three minutes in Context A (***p < 0.001). Open symbols represent females, closed symbols represent males although there were no significant sex effects or interactions. b Stress group showed robust freezing in Context A between trials of 75 dB white noise (***p < 0.001 Stress vs. No Stress). c Prior stress increased reactivity to trials of 75 dB white noise as measured by peak activity ratio. The no-stress group showed little reactivity to white noise. (***p < 0.001 Stress vs. No Stress.) d No differences between groups for dart rate across noise trials. e Micro bins (0.533 s) velocity traces for pre-stimulus, noise, and post-stimulus period averaged for the first four trials. Prior stress reduced velocity during pre-stimulus period and robustly increased peak velocity at onset of noise period. f Velocity traces averaged for all 16 trials of session. e, f Note similar patterns for groups across stimulus periods and differences in magnitude between early session (e) and whole session (f). The shaded area represents the 10-s noise period