| Literature DB >> 35804093 |
Xue Gu1,2, Yan-Jiao Wu1,2, Zichen Zhang1,2,3, Jia-Jie Zhu2, Xin-Rong Wu2, Qi Wang1,2, Xin Yi1,2,4, Ze-Jie Lin1,2, Zhi-Han Jiao1,2, Miao Xu4, Qin Jiang1,2, Ying Li1,2, Nan-Jie Xu2, Michael X Zhu5, Lu-Yang Wang6,7, Fan Jiang8,9,10, Tian-Le Xu11,12,13, Wei-Guang Li14,15,16,17.
Abstract
Fear extinction allows for adaptive control of learned fear responses but often fails, resulting in a renewal or spontaneous recovery of the extinguished fear, i.e., forgetting of the extinction memory readily occurs. Using an activity-dependent neuronal labeling strategy, we demonstrate that engram neurons for fear extinction memory are dynamically positioned in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), basolateral amygdala (BLA), and ventral hippocampus (vHPC), which constitute an engram construct in the term of directional engram synaptic connectivity from the BLA or vHPC to mPFC, but not that in the opposite direction, for retrieval of extinction memory. Fear renewal or spontaneous recovery switches the extinction engram construct from an accessible to inaccessible state, whereas additional extinction learning or optogenetic induction of long-term potentiation restores the directional engram connectivity and prevents the return of fear. Thus, the plasticity of engram construct underlies forgetting of extinction memory.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35804093 DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01684-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Psychiatry ISSN: 1359-4184 Impact factor: 15.992