Amygdala inhibition impairs fear conditioning but increases the stimulus-driven activity in the inferior colliculus

•Amygdala exerts tonic modulatory activity in the Inferior Colliculus.•Amygdala inhibition did not impair the entrained activity in the Inferior Colliculus.•Inferior colliculus enhancement by amygdala inhibition is independent of conditioning. It has been shown that fear conditioning improves the st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience letters 2020-11, Vol.738, p.135311-135311, Article 135311
Hauptverfasser: Simões, Cristiano Soares, Mourão, Flávio Afonso Gonçalves, Guarnieri, Leonardo Oliveira, Passos, Matheus Costa, Moraes, Márcio Flávio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Amygdala exerts tonic modulatory activity in the Inferior Colliculus.•Amygdala inhibition did not impair the entrained activity in the Inferior Colliculus.•Inferior colliculus enhancement by amygdala inhibition is independent of conditioning. It has been shown that fear conditioning improves the steady-state evoked potentials driven by a long lasting amplitude modulated tone in the inferior colliculus. In this work we tested the hypothesis that the amygdala modulates this effect, since it plays a crucial role in assessing the biological relevance of environmental stimuli. We inhibited the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala of rats by injecting a GABAa receptor agonist (muscimol) before the recall test session of an auditory fear conditioning paradigm and recorded the evoked activity in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus. According to our results, the treatment with muscimol decreased the expression of freezing behavior during the recall test session, but did not impair the entrainment of the evoked activity in the inferior colliculus induced by fear conditioning. We repeated the injection protocol with another group of rats but without pairing the tone to an aversive stimulus and observed that the inhibition of the basolateral amygdala enhances the stimulus-driven activity in the inferior colliculus regardless of the conditioning task. Our findings suggest that the basolateral amygdala exerts a tonic modulation over the encoding of sensory information at the early stages of the sensory pathway.
ISSN:0304-3940
1872-7972
DOI:10.1016/j.neulet.2020.135311