BMI SEMINAR // Basolateral amygdala induces trans-regional metaplasticity at the medial prefrontal cortex.

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Event details

Date 04.04.2018
Hour 12:1513:15
Speaker Gal Richter-Levin, The Brain and Behavior Laboratory, University of Haifa, Israël
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars

GABAergic synapses in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) play an important role in fear memory generation. We have previously reported that reduction in GABAergic synapses innervating specifically at the axon initial segment (AIS) of principal neurons of BLA, by neurofascin (NF) knockdown, impairs fear extinction. BLA is bidirectionally connected with the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), which is a key region involved in extinction of acquired fear memory. Here, we showed that reducing AIS GABAergic synapses within the BLA leads to impairment of synaptic plasticity in the BLA-mPFC pathway, as well as in the ventral subiculum (vSub)-mPFC pathway, which is independent of BLA involvement. The results suggest that the alteration within the BLA subsequently resulted in a form of trans-regional metaplasticity in the mPFC. In support of that notion, we observed that NF knockdown induced a severe deficit in behavioral flexibility as measured by reversal learning. Interestingly, reversal learning similar to extinction learning is an mPFC-dependent behavior. In agreement with that, measurement of the immediate early gene, c-Fos immunoreactivity after reversal learning was reduced in the mPFC and BLA, supporting further the notion that the BLA GABAergic manipulation resulted in trans-regional-metaplastic alterations within the mPFC. It is interesting to ask whether such trans-regional-metaplasticity is specific to the mPFC and BLA or may be found also in other targets of the BLA, such as the hippocampus.
 

Practical information

  • Informed public
  • Free

Organizer

  • SV BMI Host : Carmen Sandi

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