PMID: 11331391May 23, 2001Paper

Neurotoxic lesions of the lateral nucleus of the amygdala decrease conditioned fear but not unconditioned fear of a predator odor: comparison with electrolytic lesions

The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience
K J Wallace, J B Rosen

Abstract

Considerable evidence suggests that the lateral (LA) and basal (BA) nuclei of the amygdala are sites of plasticity and storage of emotional memory. Recent arguments, however, have seriously challenged this view, suggesting that the effects of amygdala lesions are attributable to interference with performance of fear behavior and not learning and memory. One way to address this controversy is to measure the same behavioral response during both conditioned and unconditioned fear. This is done in the present study by measuring fear-related freezing behavior after electrolytic and neurotoxic lesions of the LA or LA/BA nuclei in rats in a contextual fear conditioning paradigm and unconditioned fear to a predator odor. Electrolytic LA lesions attenuated post-shock freezing, retention test freezing, and freezing to the predator odor trimethylthiazoline (TMT). In contrast, excitotoxic NMDA lesions of the LA had no effect on post-shock freezing but significantly attenuated retention test freezing. Furthermore, excitotoxic LA lesions did not diminish freezing to TMT. Larger excitotoxic lesions that included the BA significantly reduced freezing in both the post-shock and retention tests but did not appreciably decrease freezing to TMT. T...Continue Reading

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