Author:
Cain Christopher K.,Godsil Bill P.,Jami Shekib,Barad Mark
Abstract
We recently reported that fear extinction, a form of inhibitory learning,
is selectively blocked by systemic administration of L-type voltage-gated
calcium channel (LVGCC) antagonists, including nifedipine, in mice. We here
replicate this finding and examine three reduced contingency effects after
vehicle or nifedipine (40 mg/kg) administration. In the first experiment,
contingency reduction was achieved by adding USs to the training protocol
(degraded contingency), a phenomenon thought to be independent of behavioral
inhibition. In the second experiment, contingency reduction was achieved by
varying the percentage of CS-US pairing, a phenomenon thought to be weakly
dependent on behavioral inhibition. In the third and fourth experiments,
contingency reduction was achieved by adding CSs to the training protocol
(partial reinforcement), a phenomenon thought to be completely dependent on
behavioral inhibition. We found that none of these reduced contingency effects
was impaired by nifedipine. In a final experiment, we found that extinction
conducted 1 or 3 h post-acquisition, but not immediately, was LVGCC-dependent.
Taken together, the results suggest that reduced contingency effects and
extinction depend on different molecular mechanisms and that LVGCC dependence
of behavioral inhibition develops with time after associative CS-US
learning.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
55 articles.
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