Author:
Ponnusamy Ravikumar,Nissim Helen A.,Barad Mark
Abstract
Extinction of conditioned fear in animals is the explicit model of behavior
therapy for human anxiety disorders, including panic disorder,
obsessive-compulsive disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Based on
previous data indicating that fear extinction in rats is blocked by
quinpirole, an agonist of dopamine D2 receptors, we hypothesized that blockade
of D2 receptors might facilitate extinction in mice, while agonists should
block extinction, as they do in rats. One day after fear conditioning mice
with three pairings of a white noise conditional stimulus (CS) with moderate
footshock, we injected the D2 antagonist, sulpiride, the D2 agonist,
quinpirole, or vehicle, just before repeated CS presentations to generate
extinction. We assayed fear by measuring behavioral freezing during extinction
presentations and then drug-free during CS presentations 1 d later. We found
that sulpiride injections before extinction training facilitated extinction
memory 24 h later, while quinpirole partially blocked extinction memory
compared with vehicle-injected controls. Notably, sulpiride treatment yielded
significant extinction after spaced CS presentations, which yield no
extinction at all in vehicle-treated mice. These findings suggest that
dopamine D2-mediated signaling contributes physiological inhibition of
extinction, and that D2 antagonists may be useful adjuncts to behavior therapy
of human anxiety disorders.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
114 articles.
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