The ERK phosphorylation levels in the amygdala predict anxiety symptoms in humans and MEK/ERK inhibition dissociates innate and learned defensive behaviors in rats

We demonstrate that the rate of extracellular signal-related kinase phosphorylation (P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2) in the amygdala is negatively and independently associated with anxiety symptoms in 23 consecutive patients with drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy that was surgically treated. In na...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular psychiatry 2021-12, Vol.26 (12), p.7257-7269
Hauptverfasser: de Carvalho, Cristiane Ribeiro, Lopes, Mark William, Constantino, Leandra C., Hoeller, Alexandre Ademar, de Melo, Hiago Murilo, Guarnieri, Ricardo, Linhares, Marcelo Neves, Bortolotto, Zuner Assis, Prediger, Rui Daniel, Latini, Alexandra, Lin, Katia, Licinio, Julio, Leal, Rodrigo Bainy, Walz, Roger
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We demonstrate that the rate of extracellular signal-related kinase phosphorylation (P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2) in the amygdala is negatively and independently associated with anxiety symptoms in 23 consecutive patients with drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy that was surgically treated. In naive Wistar rats, the P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2 ratio in the amygdala correlates negatively with innate anxiety-related behavior on the elevated plus maze ( n  = 20) but positively with expression of defensive-learned behavior (i.e., freezing) on Pavlovian aversive (fear) conditioning ( n  = 29). The microinfusion of ERK1/2 inhibitor (FR180204, n  = 8–13/group) or MEK inhibitor (U0126, n  = 8–9/group) into the basolateral amygdala did not affect anxiety-related behavior but impaired the evocation (anticipation) of conditioned-defensive behavior ( n  = 9–11/group). In conclusion, the P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2 ratio in the amygdala predicts anxiety in humans and the innate anxiety- and conditioned freezing behaviors in rats. However, the ERK1/2 in the basolateral AMY is only required for the expression of defensive-learned behavior. These results support a dissociate ERK-dependent mechanism in the amygdala between innate anxiety-like responses and the anticipation of learned-defensive behavior. These findings have implications for understanding highly prevalent psychiatric disorders related to the defensive circuit manifested by anxiety and fear. Highlights The P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2 ratio in the amygdala (AMY) correlates negatively with anxiety symptoms in patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. The P-ERK1,2/Total-ERK1,2 in the amygdala correlates negatively with the anxiety-like behavior and positively with freezing-learned behavior in naive rats. ERK1,2 in the basolateral amygdala is required for learned-defensive but not for the anxiety-like behavior expression in rats.
ISSN:1359-4184
1476-5578
DOI:10.1038/s41380-021-01203-0