Serotonergic Modulation of Conditioned Fear

Author:

Homberg Judith R.1

Affiliation:

1. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Radboud University Medical Centre, Geert Grooteplein 21, Route 126, 6525 EZ Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Conditioned fear plays a key role in anxiety disorders as well as depression and other neuropsychiatric conditions. Understanding how neuromodulators drive the associated learning and memory processes, including memory consolidation, retrieval/expression, and extinction (recall), is essential in the understanding of (individual differences in vulnerability to) these disorders and their treatment. The human and rodent studies I review here together reveal, amongst others, that acute selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) treatment facilitates fear conditioning, reduces contextual fear, and increases cued fear, chronic SSRI treatment reduces both contextual and cued fear, 5-HT1Areceptors inhibit the acquisition and expression of contextual fear, 5-HT2Areceptors facilitates the consolidation of cued and contextual fear, inactivation of 5-HT2Creceptors facilitate the retrieval of cued fear memory, the 5-HT3receptor mediates contextual fear, genetically induced increases in serotonin levels are associated with increased fear conditioning, impaired cued fear extinction, or impaired extinction recall, and that genetically induced 5-HT depletion increases fear conditioning and contextual fear. Several explanations are presented to reconcile seemingly paradoxical relationships between serotonin levels and conditioned fear.

Funder

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science

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