Daldrup T., Remmes J., Lesting J., Gaburro S., Fendt M., Meuth P., Kloke V., Pape H., Seidenbecher T.
Forschungsartikel (Zeitschrift) | Peer reviewedFear-potentiated acoustic startle paradigms have been used to investigate phasic and sustained components of conditioned fear in rats and humans. This study describes a novel training protocol to assess phasic and sustained fear in freely behaving C57BL/6J mice, using freezing and/or fear-potentiated startle as measures of fear, thereby, if needed, allowing in vivo application of various techniques, such as optogenetics, electrophysiology and pharmacological intervention, in freely behaving animals. An auditory Pavlovian fear conditioning paradigm, with pseudo-randomized conditioned-unconditioned stimulus presentations at various durations, is combined with repetitive brief auditory white noise burst presentations during fear memory retrieval 24 h after fear conditioning. Major findings are that (1) a motion sensitive platform built on mechano-electrical transducers enables measurement of startle responses in freely behaving mice, (2) absence or presence of startle stimuli during retrieval as well as unpredictability of a given threat determine phasic and sustained fear response profiles and (3) both freezing and startle responses indicate phasic and sustained components of behavioral fear, with sustained freezing reflecting unpredictability of conditioned stimulus (CS)/unconditioned stimulus (US) pairings. This paradigm and available genetically modified mouse lines will pave the way for investigation of the molecular and neural mechanisms relating to the transition from phasic to sustained fear. This study describes a novel training protocol to assess phasic/sustained fear in freely behaving mice, using freezing and/or fear-potentiated startle as measures of fear. Findings are that (1) a motion sensitive platform enables measurement of startle responses in freely behaving mice, (2) absence or presence of startle stimuli during retrieval as well as unpredictability of a given threat determine phasic/sustained fear response profiles and(3) both freezing and startle responses indicate phasic/sustained components of fear, with sustained freezing reflecting unpredictability of conditioned stimulus (CS)/unconditioned stimulus (US) pairings.
Kloke, Vanessa | Arbeitsgruppe Evolutionsökologie der Tiere (Prof. Kurtz) |
Pape, Hans-Christian | Institut für Physiologie I |
Remmes, Jasmin Latifeh | Institut für Physiologie I |
Seidenbecher, Thomas Edgar | Institut für Physiologie I |