• Neuroscience · Jan 2024

    Correlation between cue fear memory retrieval and oscillatory network inhibition in the amygdala is disrupted by acute REM sleep deprivation.

    • Miki Hashizume, Rina Ito, Rie Suge, Yasushi Hojo, Gen Murakami, and Takayuki Murakoshi.
    • Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, Saitama Medical University, Japan.
    • Neuroscience. 2024 Jan 9; 536: 122012-20.

    AbstractThe basolateral amygdaloid complex (BLA) is critically involved in emotional behaviors, such as aversive memory formation. In particular, fear memory after cued fear conditioning is strongly associated with the BLA, whereas both the BLA and hippocampus are essential for contextual fear memory formation. In the present study, we examined the effects of acute (3 h) sleep deprivation (SD) on BLA-associated fear memory in juvenile (P24-32) rats and performed in vitro electrophysiology using whole-cell patch clamping from the basolateral nucleus (BA) of the BLA. BA projection neurons exhibit the network oscillation, i.e., spontaneous oscillatory bursts of inhibitory transmission at 0.1-3 Hz, as previously reported. In the present study, SD either before or after fear conditioning (FC) disturbed the acquisition of tone-associated fear memory without significant effects on contextual fear memory. FC reduced the power of the oscillatory activity, but SD did not further reduce the oscillation power. Oscillation power was correlated with tone-associated freezing rate (FR) in SD-free fear-conditioned rats, but this relation was disrupted in SD treated group. Rhythm index (RI), the rhythmicity of the oscillation, quantified by autocorrelation analysis, also correlated with tone-associated FR in the combined data, including FC alone and FC with SD. These results suggest that slow network oscillation in the amygdala contributes to the formation of amygdala-dependent fear memory in relation to sleep.Copyright © 2023 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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