• J. Neurosci. · Feb 2016

    Higher-Order Sensory Cortex Drives Basolateral Amygdala Activity during the Recall of Remote, but Not Recently Learned Fearful Memories.

    • Marco Cambiaghi, Anna Grosso, Ekaterina Likhtik, Raffaele Mazziotti, Giulia Concina, Annamaria Renna, Tiziana Sacco, Joshua A Gordon, and Benedetto Sacchetti.
    • Rita Levi-Montalcini Department of Neuroscience, University of Turin, I-10125 Turin, Italy.
    • J. Neurosci. 2016 Feb 3; 36 (5): 1647-59.

    UnlabelledNegative experiences are quickly learned and long remembered. Key unresolved issues in the field of emotional memory include identifying the loci and dynamics of memory storage and retrieval. The present study examined neural activity in the higher-order auditory cortex Te2 and basolateral amygdala (BLA) and their crosstalk during the recall of recent and remote fear memories. To this end, we obtained local field potentials and multiunit activity recordings in Te2 and BLA of rats that underwent recall at 24 h and 30 d after the association of an acoustic conditioned (CS, tone) and an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US, electric shock). Here we show that, during the recall of remote auditory threat memories in rats, the activity of the Te2 and BLA is highly synchronized in the theta frequency range. This functional connectivity stems from memory consolidation processes because it is present during remote, but not recent, memory retrieval. Moreover, the observed increase in synchrony is cue and region specific. A preponderant Te2-to-BLA directionality characterizes this dialogue, and the percentage of time Te2 theta leads the BLA during remote memory recall correlates with a faster latency to freeze to the auditory conditioned stimulus. The blockade of this information transfer via Te2 inhibition with muscimol prevents any retrieval-evoked neuronal activity in the BLA and animals are unable to retrieve remote memories. We conclude that memories stored in higher-order sensory cortices drive BLA activity when distinguishing between learned threatening and neutral stimuli.Significance StatementHow and where in the brain do we store the affective/motivational significance of sensory stimuli acquired through life experiences? Scientists have long investigated how "limbic" structures, such as the amygdala, process affective stimuli. Here we show that retrieval of well-established threat memories requires the functional interplay between higher-order components of the auditory cortex and the amygdala via synchrony in the theta range. This functional connectivity is a result of memory consolidation processes and is characterized by a predominant cortical to amygdala direction of information transfer. This connectivity is predictive of the animals' ability to recognize auditory stimuli as aversive. In the absence of this necessary cortical activity, the amygdala is unable to distinguish between frightening and neutral stimuli.Copyright © 2016 the authors 0270-6474/16/361647-13$15.00/0.

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