Effect of the Matrix Metalloproteinase Inhibitor Doxycycline on Human Trace Fear Memory

Author:

Wehrli Jelena M.ORCID,Xia YanfangORCID,Offenhammer Benjamin,Kleim Birgit,Müller Daniel,Bach Dominik R.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractLearning to predict threat is of adaptive importance, but aversive memory can also become disadvantageous and burdensome in clinical conditions such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Pavlovian fear conditioning is a laboratory model of aversive memory and thought to rely on structural synaptic reconfiguration involving matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)9 signaling. It has recently been suggested that the MMP9-inhibiting antibiotic doxycycline, applied before acquisition training in humans, reduces fear memory retention after one week. This previous study used cued delay fear conditioning, in which predictors and outcomes overlap in time. However, temporal separation of predictors and outcomes is common in clinical conditions. Learning the association of temporally separated events requires a partly different neural circuitry, for which the role of MMP9 signaling is not yet known. Here, we investigate the impact of doxycycline on long-interval (15 s) trace fear conditioning in a randomized controlled trial with 101 (50 females) human participants. We find no impact of the drug in our preregistered analyses. Exploratorypost hocanalyses of memory retention suggested a serum level-dependent effect of doxycycline on trace fear memory retention. However, effect size to distinguish CS+/CS− in the placebo group turned out to be smaller than in previously used delay fear conditioning protocols, which limits the power of statistical tests. Our results suggest that doxycycline effect on trace fear conditioning in healthy individuals is smaller and less robust than anticipated, potentially limiting its clinical application potential.

Funder

Clinical Research Priority Program of the University of Zurich "Synapse and Trauma"

European Research Council

Wellcome Centre for Human Neuroimaging

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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