Author:
Derman Rifka C.,Lattal K. Matthew
Abstract
AbstractIn humans, an acutely traumatic experience can lead to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which is often characterized by changes in anxiety and motivation months after trauma. There are few demonstrations of the persistent motivational effects of an acute stressor in rodent approaches to PTSD. In two experiments, we evaluated the persistent effects of a battery of footshocks in one context on appetitive Pavlovian conditioning, instrumental learning, and Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer (PIT) in a different context. A battery of footshocks before appetitive training caused deficits in single-outcome PIT in male Long Evans rats. The same battery of footshocks after appetitive training, but before testing had little effect on single-outcome PIT, but there were some qualitative deficits. Although males showed more generalized fear from the aversive to the appetitive context compared to females, there were no effects of shock on sensory-specific PIT in male or female rats. In general females showed less evidence for sensory-specific PIT compared to males, who showed robust sensory-specific PIT, with clear extinction and spontaneous recovery of the sensory-specific PIT effect across test sessions. These findings show that (a) an acute trauma can have persistent effects on general motivational processes and (b) sensory-specific PIT is a useful approach for exploring sex differences in strategies for instrumental learning. We discuss implications for current approaches to stress and motivation in preclinical and clinical studies.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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