Affiliation:
1. Department of Neuroscience and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Abstract
Wiping Out Memories
Inhibition of fear responses can be unexpectedly reversed even when a subject is perfectly safe. This can lead to inappropriate reactions to a fear-associated trigger, such as a bright light or loud noise. This type of reaction appears to underpin posttraumatic stress disorder, but there is little understanding of when training to inhibit fear may fail or succeed. Using a combination of electrophysiology and behavioral training in mice,
Clem and Huganir
(p.
1108
, published online 28 October) observed that fear conditioning increased synaptic transmission by calcium-permeable AMPA receptors into the part of the brain that controls emotional responses (the amygdala). This effect lasted for about a week, during which the fearful memories could be erased if the animals were trained to reduce conditioned fear responses. Postmortem brain slices showed that the fear-induced synaptic changes also reversed, except in transgenic mice with a mutant subunit of the AMPA receptor.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Cited by
431 articles.
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