Author:
Perry Christina J,Ganella Despina E,Nguyen Ly Dao,Du Xin,Drummond Katherine D,Whittle Sarah,Pang Terence Y,Kim Jee Hyun
Abstract
AbstractAnxiety disorders are more prevalent in females than males, and frequently emerge during adolescence. Despite this, preclinical research commonly focuses on adult males. Here we use Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction in adolescent male and female rats to understand sex- and age-dependent processes relevant to anxiety disorders. In experiment 1, 35-day-old male and female rats were exposed to 6 pairings of a conditioned stimulus (CS, a tone) with an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US, a footshock). The next day they were extinguished in a contextually distinct chamber, via 60 presentations of the CS without the US. Extinction recall was tested 24 hours later in the extinction context. Estrous phase was monitored by cytology on vaginal smears taken 1 hour after each behavioral session. In experiment 2, male and female rats were given sham surgery or gonadectomy at 21 days of age. They were then trained and tested as for experiment 1. We observed that females in proestrus or met/diestrus during extinction showed delayed extinction and impaired extinction recall the next day compared to males. Ovariectomy enhanced extinction for female rats, but orchidectomy delayed extinction for males. Plasma analyses showed that met/di/proestrus phases were associated with high estradiol levels. These findings suggest that high plasma estradiol levels impair extinction for adolescent females. While these results contradict what is observed in adult animals, they are consistent with the prevalence of anxiety disorders observed in females. Our findings have important implications for understanding and treating anxiety in adolescents, particularly where treatment involves extinction-based therapies.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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