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      Chronic activation of fear engrams induces extinction-like behavior in ethanol-exposed mice

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          ABSTRACT

          Alcohol withdrawal directly impacts the brain’s stress and memory systems, which may underlie individual susceptibility to persistent drug and alcohol-seeking behaviors. Numerous studies demonstrate that forced alcohol abstinence, which may lead to withdrawal, can impair fear-related memory processes in rodents such as extinction learning, however the underlying neural circuits mediating these impairments remain elusive. Here, we tested an optogenetic strategy aimed at mitigating fear extinction impairments in male c57BL/6 mice following exposure to alcohol (i.e., ethanol) and forced abstinence. In the first experiment, extensive behavioral extinction training in a fear-conditioned context was impaired in ethanol-exposed mice compared to controls. In the second experiment, neuronal ensembles processing a contextual fear memory in the dorsal hippocampus were tagged and optogenetically reactivated repeatedly in a distinct context in ethanol-exposed and control mice. Chronic activation of these cells resulted in a context-specific, extinction-like reduction in fear responses in both control and ethanol-exposed mice. These findings suggest that while ethanol can impair fear extinction learning, optogenetic manipulation of a fear engram is sufficient to induce an extinction-like reduction in fear responses.

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          Contributors
          (View ORCID Profile)
          Journal
          bioRxiv
          July 02 2020
          Article
          10.1101/2020.07.01.182782
          c1919802-000d-4735-8c48-3aa8aaecbcb2
          © 2020
          History

          Molecular medicine,Neurosciences
          Molecular medicine, Neurosciences

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