AMPA Receptor Facilitation Accelerates Fear Learning without Altering the Level of Conditioned Fear Acquired

Rats treated with the AMPA receptor-facilitating drug 1-(quinoxolin-6-ylcarbonyl)piperidine (BDP-12) during training acquired fear conditioning to a tone faster than vehicle-treated controls. The effect on acquisition was dependent on the dose given. BDP-12-treated rats and vehicle-treated controls...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 1997-08, Vol.17 (15), p.5928-5935
Hauptverfasser: Rogan, Michael T, Staubli, Ursula V, LeDoux, Joseph E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rats treated with the AMPA receptor-facilitating drug 1-(quinoxolin-6-ylcarbonyl)piperidine (BDP-12) during training acquired fear conditioning to a tone faster than vehicle-treated controls. The effect on acquisition was dependent on the dose given. BDP-12-treated rats and vehicle-treated controls reached the same level of conditioned fear and extinguished at the same rate. The dissociation of learning rate from these other normally covariant measures suggests that the drug had a specific and isolated effect on acquisition. Controls for drug effects on stimulus sensitivity, locomotor activity, generalized fearfulness, and other performance factors support this interpretation. The known action of BDP-12 on receptor dynamics suggests that its effect on acquisition may be attributed to specific modulation of an AMPA and NMDA receptor-dependent plasticity mechanism. The finding that the drug accelerates acquisition but does not affect the level of conditioned fear acquired parallels the effect of the drug on long-term potentiation (LTP) (increasing the rate but not the ceiling of potentiation) and suggests that common mechanisms may underlie fear conditioning and LTP.
ISSN:0270-6474
1529-2401
DOI:10.1523/jneurosci.17-15-05928.1997