 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 1999, 19(1):420-430
Pain Pathways Involved in Fear Conditioning Measured with
Fear-Potentiated Startle: Lesion Studies
Changjun
Shi and
Michael
Davis
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New
Haven, Connecticut 06508
 |
ABSTRACT |
It is well established that the basolateral amygdala is critically
involved in the association between an unconditioned stimulus (US),
such as a foot shock, and a conditioned stimulus (CS), such as a light,
during classic fear conditioning. However, little is known about how
the US (pain) inputs are relayed to the basolateral amygdala. The
present studies were designed to define potential US pathways to the
amygdala using lesion methods. Electrolytic lesions before or after
training were placed in caudal granular/dysgranular insular cortex (IC)
alone or in conjunction with the posterior intralaminar nuclei of the
thalamus (PoT/PIL), and the effects on fear conditioning were examined.
Pretraining lesions of both IC and PoT/PIL, but not lesions of IC
alone, blocked the acquisition of fear-potentiated startle. However,
post-training combined lesions of IC and PoT/PIL did not prevent
expression of conditioned fear. Given that previous studies have shown
that lesions of PoT/PIL alone had no effect on acquisition of
conditioned fear, these results suggest that two parallel cortical
(insula-amygdala) and subcortical (PoT/PIL-amygdala) pathways are
involved in relaying shock information to the basolateral amygdala
during fear conditioning.
Key words:
fear conditioning; amygdala; insular cortex; posterior
intralaminar nuclei; nociception; startle
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Classic fear conditioning is one of
the most widely used models for studying the neural mechanisms of
learning and memory. In this paradigm, an innocuous conditioned
stimulus (CS), usually a light or tone, is paired with an aversive
unconditioned stimulus (US), such as a foot shock. After pairing, the
CS now produces a constellation of behavioral and autonomic responses
(conditioned fear responses) formerly produced only by the US.
Converging evidence now indicates that the amygdala plays a crucial
role in fear conditioning and that different subnuclei within the
amygdala may play different roles in the development and expression of
conditioned fear. The central nucleus of the amygdala has widespread
connections with autonomic, neuroendocrine, and motor-related
structures in the hypothalamus and brainstem and is required for the
expression of various fear responses via these differential efferents
(Davis, 1992 ; Kapp et al., 1992 ; LeDoux, 1992a ,b ). The
basolateral amygdala, mainly the lateral and basolateral nuclei,
integrates different sensory inputs that are passed on to the dorsal,
ventral, and allostriatum to execute different emotional responses
(LeDoux et al., 1988 , 1990b , 1992a ,b ; Everitt et al.,
1991 ; Davis et al., 1994 ; Shi, 1995 ).
Although anatomical tracing studies have defined various afferents from
different sensory cortices, as well as thalamic structures, to the
basolateral amygdala (McDonald and Jackson, 1987 ; LeDoux et al., 1990a ;
Turner and Herkenham, 1991 ; Yasui et al., 1991 ; Mascagni et al., 1993 ;
Romanski and LeDoux, 1993 ; Shi and Cassell, 1997 ), the exact
functional roles of these pathways in emotional learning remains
unclear. Recent lesion studies suggest that there are parallel cortical
and thalamic routes through which a simple auditory CS (i.e., a tone)
can transmit information to the amygdala in fear conditioning (Romanski
and LeDoux, 1992b ; Campeau and Davis, 1995 ). However, it is unknown
whether this parallel processing is a general rule in transmitting
other CSs, such as light, and USs, such as a foot shock, the most
common US used in fear conditioning.
The goal of the present study was to investigate the somatic pain
pathways that transmit foot shock information to the basolateral amygdala during fear conditioning in rats. Based on the available literature, two brain areas (areas medial to the medial geniculate nucleus and the insular cortex) were singled out for study. The former
includes the posterior triangular nucleus (PoT), the posterior intralaminar nucleus (PIL), the suprageniculate nucleus (SG), parvocellular part of the subparafascicular nucleus (SPFPC), and possibly the medial subdivision of the medial geniculate complex (MGM),
which constitute a posterior extension of the intralaminar complex
(Winer et al., 1988 ). Besides receiving acoustic inputs from the
inferior colliculus (LeDoux et al., 1987 ), the posterior intralaminar
nuclei also receive somatic pain inputs from the spinal cord (LeDoux et
al., 1987 , 1990a ; Dado and Giesler, 1990 ; Cliffer et al., 1991 ) and in
turn project to the amygdala, particularly the lateral amygdaloid
nucleus (LeDoux et al., 1985 , 1987 , 1990a ; Yasui et al., 1991 ; Shi and
Davis, 1997 ). Electrical stimulation of this area is an effective
unconditioned stimulus for fear conditioning similar to foot shock
(Cruikshank et al., 1992 ). Thus, this thalamoamygdaloid pathway may
serve as a US pathway during emotional learning. However, pretraining
lesions of the posterior intralaminar nuclei alone did not prevent the
acquisition of fear conditioning (Romanski and LeDoux, 1992b ; Campeau
and Davis, 1995 ), indicating that an additional pathway or pathways
must contribute foot shock information to the amygdala.
Recent anatomical studies suggest that the insular cortex, besides
being critical in gustatory and visceral sensation, may also be
involved in somatosensory perception, particularly aversive pain
sensation. The caudal part of insular cortex, the so-called "parietal
insula" (Shi and Cassell, 1998a ,b ), receives convergent inputs from
somatosensory cortices, ventroposterior and posterior thalamic nuclei,
posterior intralaminar nuclei, and the midbrain parabrachial nucleus
(Yasui et al., 1989 ; Fabri and Burton, 1991 ; Craig et al., 1994 ;
Barnett et al., 1995 ; Shi and Cassell, 1998a ). Furthermore, this
portion of the insular cortex is probably a primary source in providing
cortical somatosensory information to the amygdala (Friedman and
Murray, 1986 ; Shi and Cassell, 1998a ). Thus, it is possible that the
caudal insula together with posterior intralaminar nuclei may compose
parallel cortical and thalamic routes to relay somatic pain information
activated by a shock US to the amygdala during fear conditioning.
To test this hypothesis, a series of lesion experiments were designed.
Electrolytic lesions of posterior parietal insula alone or combined
with posterior intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus (PoT/PIL) were
performed either before or after training. Fear conditioning was
conducted by pairing a foot shock with a light or a tone. The
acquisition of conditioning was tested by measuring fear-potentiated
startle, a well defined paradigm for measuring fear conditioning (Davis
et al., 1993 ). We reasoned that if parallel corticoamygdala and
thalamoamygdala pain pathways exist, combined cortical and thalamic
lesions performed before, but not after, training would be necessary to
block fear conditioning.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects
A total of 71 adult male albino Sprague Dawley rats (Charles
River, Portage, MI) weighing 320-400 gm were used. Animals were housed
in groups of two or three in wire cases (17 × 35 × 45 cm) with water and laboratory chow continuously available. They were maintained on a 12 hr light/dark cycle (lights on at 7:00 A.M.), and
behavioral procedures occurred during the light period. Rats were
acclimated to the colony rooms for 2-3 weeks before experimental manipulation.
Experimental design
Three experiments were performed. Experiment 1 tested the
effects of pretraining electrolytic lesions of posterior parietal insular cortex alone on fear-potentiated startle. Experiment 2 tested
the effects of combined pretraining lesions of posterior parietal
insular cortex and posterior intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus on
acquisition of fear-potentiated startle. Experiment 3 tested the
effects of the same combined lesions performed after training to
determine the specificity of the pretraining combined lesion effect
that was observed in Experiment 2.
Apparatus
Animals were trained and tested in five identical stabilimeter
devices that have been described previously (Cassella and Davis, 1986 ).
Briefly, each stabilimeter consisted of an 8 × 15 × 15 cm
Plexiglas and wire mesh cage suspended within a steel frame. The floor
of each stabilimeter consisted of four 6-mm-diameter stainless steel
bars spaced 18 mm apart through which shock could be delivered. Within
the steel frame, the cage was compressed between four springs above and
a 5 × 5 cm rubber cylinder below, with an accelerometer (Endevco
2217E) located between the cage and the rubber cylinder. Cage movement
resulted in displacement of an accelerometer where the resultant
voltage was proportional to the velocity of the cage displacement.
Startle amplitude was defined as the maximum accelerometer voltage that
occurred during the first 0.2 sec after the startle stimulus was
delivered. The analog output of the accelerometer was amplified
(Endevco model 104), digitized on a scale of 0-4096 units by a
MacADIOS II board (GW Instruments, Somerville, MA), and stored on a
Macintosh II microcomputer.
Each stabilimeter was enclosed in a ventilated, light-, and
sound-attenuating box (68.5 × 35.5 × 42 cm). This inner
isolation box was located within an additional outer-ventilated
plywood-isolated box (76 × 47 × 51 cm). The five wooden
boxes, in turn, were housed in a larger ventilated, light- and
sound-attenuating chamber [2.5 × 2.5 × 2.0 m
(Industrial Acoustic, Bronx, NY)]. A TV camera (Ikegami) for observing
the behavior of the rats during the experiment was positioned behind
the stabilimeter within the inner isolation box and connected to a TV
monitor located outside of the chamber. A red light bulb (7.5 W) was
located on the floor of the inner isolation box to provide illumination
for the cameras in the otherwise dark box.
Stimuli
All sound level measurements were made with a Precision Sound
Level Meter (A scale, Model 2235; Bruel & Kjaer). Background noise
(0-20 kHz, 55 dB) was produced by a white noise generator (Lafayette,
Model 15800, Lafayette, ID) and delivered through high-frequency
speakers (Radio Shack Supertweeters; range, 5-40 kHz) located 2 cm
from the front of each stabilimeter. This plus the noise of the
ventilating fan attached to the side wall of each wooden box produced
an overall background noise level of 64 dB. The startle stimulus was a
50 msec burst of white noise (5 msec rise-decay time) of various
intensities generated by a white noise generator (Lafayette, Model
15800) and delivered through the same speakers as the background noise.
The visual CS was a 3.7 sec light produced by an 8 W fluorescent bulb
(100 µsec rise time, 700 foot lamberts) attached to the back of each
stabilimeter. The auditory CS was produced by a white noise generator
and bandpass-filtered, with both the low and high passes set at 2 kHz
(24 dB/octave attenuation), at an intensity of 70 dB (SPL). Relatively
low-frequency auditory CSs were previously found to produce reliable
fear-potentiated startle (Campeau and Davis, 1992 ). The auditory CS was
delivered by a speaker located ~70 cm in front of each cage. The
unconditioned stimulus was a 0.6 mA foot shock with a duration of 0.5 sec, generated by five Lehigh Valley constant-current shockers
(SGS-004, Beltsville, MD) located outside the chamber. Shock
intensity was measured with a 1 k resistor across a differential
channel of an oscilloscope in series with a 100 k resistor connected
between adjacent floor bars within each stabilimeter. Current was
defined as the root mean square voltage across the 1 k resistor,
where mA = 0.707 × 0.5 × peak-to-peak voltage. The
presentation and sequencing of all stimuli were under the control of
the Macintosh II microcomputer.
Behavioral procedures
Matching. On the first 2 d of all experiments,
rats were placed in the stabilimeter cages and 5 min later presented
with 30 startle stimuli at a 30 sec interstimulus interval. Intensities of 90, 95, and 105 dB were used with 10 startle stimuli at each intensity. Startle stimuli were presented in a balanced, irregular sequence, with the restriction that each of the three intensities had
to occur in every three trial blocks. The mean startle amplitude across
the 30 startle stimuli on the last matching day was used to assign rats
into sham or lesion groups with similar means before training or surgery.
Training. On each of 2 consecutive d, rats were placed in
the stabilimeter cages and 5 min later received the first of 10 visual
CS-shock or auditory CS-shock pairings. The shock was delivered during
the last 0.5 sec of the 3.7 sec light or noise CSs at an average
intertrial interval of 4 min (range, 3-5 min).
Shock-induced activity. To obtain a measure of how the
lesions might have affected reactivity to foot shock during training, stabilimeter output during the 10 CS-shock pairings was sampled for 0.2 sec periods after shock onset. Shock activity was defined as the mean
cage output across the 10 shock presentations.
Testing. Rats were placed in the same startle cages where
they were trained and after 5 min presented with 18 startle-eliciting stimuli in the dark (six at each of three intensities: 90, 95, or 105 dB). These initial startle stimuli (hereafter called "leaders") were used to habituate the rats to the acoustic startle stimuli. Thirty
seconds after the last leader stimulus, each animal received 60 startle
stimuli (20 at each of three intensities: 90, 95, or 105 dB) with half
of the stimuli presented alone (startle alone trials) and the other
half presented 3.2 sec after the onset of the 3.7 sec CS (CS-startle
trials). The six trial types were presented in randomized order. All
startle stimuli were presented at a 30 sec interstimulus interval.
Shock sensitization. One week after potentiated startle
testing, the animals were returned to the test cages and presented with
a total of 40 startle stimuli (105 dB) at a 30 sec interstimulus interval. Fifteen seconds after the last noise burst, 10 shocks of 0.6 mA each were presented at a rate of one shock per second. Fifteen
seconds after the last shock, a final series of 40 startle stimuli (105 dB) were presented at a 30 sec interstimulus interval.
Electrolytic lesions
Stereotaxic surgical procedures were performed under anesthesia
with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg, i.p.). Lesion coordinates were
based on the rat atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1986) . The coronal
plane was referenced, and a flat-skull position was achieved by
adjusting the incisor bar accordingly. Electrolytic lesions were made
with stainless steel electrodes (0.25 mm in diameter) insulated except
for 0.5 mm of the tip. A constant current source generated DC anodal
current for all electrolytic lesions at an intensity of 1.0 mA. Lesions
of insular cortex were performed by applying current for 10 sec at each
at the following coordinates: anterioposterior (AP) = 2.0 mm,
mediolateral (ML) = ±6.0 mm, dorsoventral (DV) = 7.0 mm; and AP = 3.3 mm, ML= ±6.0 mm, DV = 7.0 mm. Lesions of posterior
thalamus were performed by applying current for 5 sec at each at the
following coordinates: AP = 4.8 mm, ML= ±2.6 mm, DV = 6.5 mm; and AP = 5.8 mm, ML= ±2.6 mm, DV = 6.5 mm.
Sham electrolytic lesions consisted of lowering the electrode 1.0 mm
above the ventral lesion coordinate without passing current. All
subjects were allowed 7-10 d recovery from surgery before training or testing.
Histology
At the end of experiments, lesioned rats were anesthetized with
an overdose of chloral hydrate and perfused with physiological saline
followed by 10% buffered formalin phosphate. Brains were removed and
stored in a solution of 30% sucrose in formalin for at least 2 d.
Sections (50 µm thick) were cut through lesion sites on a frozen
microtome and mounted on gelatin-coated slides. After drying, the
slides were stained with cresyl violet, and the extent of lesion sites
was evaluated under a microscope.
Data analysis
Inclusion of rats in statistical analyses was based strictly on
the adequacy of lesions, without knowledge of the behavioral data of
individual rats. Criteria for adequate lesions included bilateral
damage of the area investigated throughout most of its extent, with
incomplete and inconsistent damage of surrounding areas. In the case of
the insular cortex, the lesions had to include the granular and
dysgranular cortices of caudal insula bilaterally, extending
approximately from 1.8 to 3.8 mm behind bregma in Paxinos and Watson
(1986) . This portion of insular cortex has been shown to connect with
limb regions of primary and secondary somatosensory cortices and in
turn projects to the amygdala in rats (Fabri and Burton, 1991 ; Shi and
Cassell, 1998a ). However, lesions had to be limited to the dorsal bank
of the rhinal sulcus. Rats with substantial damage to the ventral bank,
which composes the agranular insular cortex, were excluded. For the
thalamus, the lesions had to include the PoT, PIL, and MGM (Paxinos and
Watson, 1986 ). These areas receive direct spinothalamic inputs and
project to the amygdala.
Mean startle amplitudes were computed for the startle stimulus alone
trials and the visual or auditory CS trials, respectively, for each
rat. In addition, the mean startle amplitude on the startle stimulus
alone trials was subtracted from the mean startle amplitude on the
respective visual and auditory CS trials, providing a difference score
for each CS modality for each rat. Repeated-measures ANOVAs were first
conducted on the mean startle amplitude data, to detect significant
levels of fear-potentiated startle (trial type effect) and possible
interactions with treatment (sham or lesion). These analyses were
complemented, when required, by t tests.
For the shock-induced activity test, mean activity was computed by
averaging activity across the 20 shock presentations (i.e., 10 shocks
on each of 2 d). A one-way ANOVA was conducted to detect possible
interactions with treatment.
Shock sensitization was computed by comparing the mean startle
amplitude across the 40 startle stimuli before shocks with the 40 startle stimuli after shocks. Repeated-measures ANOVAs were conducted
on the mean startle amplitude data to detect significant levels of
shock sensitization of startle reflex by foot shock and possible
interactions with treatment. Complementary t tests were also
performed, if necessary.
 |
EXPERIMENT 1: PRETRAINING LESIONS OF POSTERIOR PARIETAL INSULA |
Materials and methods
The purpose of Experiment 1 was to evaluate the effects of lesions
of posterior parietal insula on the acquisition of fear-potentiated startle in which animals were lesioned before training. A total of 18 rats were matched into two groups of 8-10 rats each. Two to 3 d
later, rats received electrolytic lesions or sham lesions aimed at the
dorsal bank (granular and dysgranular portions) of posterior parietal
insular cortex. One week after surgery all animals received conditioned
fear training using a visual CS and were tested for fear-potentiated
startle 2 d after training. A week later, animals had another
2 d training session in which an auditory CS was paired with foot
shock. They were tested with the auditory CS 24 hr later.
Results and discussion
Histology
Two rats in the sham group died as a result of anesthesia during
surgery, which left n = 6. From the 10 rats that
received bilateral electrolytic lesions aimed at posterior parietal
insula, two animals were excluded because of sparing of a significant portion of caudal insular cortex. In the other rats (n = 8), there was also some damage to the ventral portion of secondary
somatosensory cortices immediately above the parietal insula. Some
animals had inconsistent damage to the adjacent caudate-putamen and
most rostral portion of temporal cortex. However, no case had
significant damage of agranular insular cortex. Histological
reconstructions of the smallest and largest electrolytically induced
insular cortex lesions are shown in Figure
1.

View larger version (44K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Histological reconstructions of the smallest
(black) and largest (gray)
electrolytic lesions of posterior parietal insular cortex in Experiment
1 on coronal plates from the atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1986) . The
numbers to the left indicate rostrocaudal levels
relative to bregma. S1, Primary somatosensory cortex;
S2, secondary somatosensory cortex;
GI/DI, granular and dysgranular insular cortex;
AI, agranular insular cortex.
|
|
Fear-potentiated startle
Pretraining electrolytic lesions of the posterior parietal insular
cortex did not prevent the acquisition of fear-potentiated startle to
either a visual or auditory CS. Figure
2A shows the mean
amplitude startle responses on the startle stimulus alone trials and
the visual CS + startle stimulus trials, and the difference scores
between these two trial types for sham (n = 6) and
insular lesioned (n = 8) groups. Figure
2B shows the mean amplitude startle of same group of
animals on the startle stimulus alone and the auditory CS + startle
stimulus trials. Figure 2 indicates that animals in both sham and IC
lesioned groups exhibited fear-potentiated startle to both CS
modalities.

View larger version (20K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Mean amplitude startle response on startle alone
trials (solid bars), startle + CS trials (open
bars), and difference (+SEM) between startle alone and startle + CS trials (hatched bars) in sham-operated and lesioned
animals. A, Tested with visual CS; B,
tested with auditory CS. The pretraining lesion of posterior parietal
insular cortex alone had no significant effect on fear-potentiated
startle.
|
|
A repeated-measures ANOVA showed a significant overall difference
between the visual CS + startle stimulus and startle stimulus alone
trials (F(1,12) = 21.66, p < 0.001) and the auditory CS + startle stimulus and startle stimulus
alone trials (F(1,12) = 36.57, p < 0.001), indicative of fear-potentiated startle to visual and
auditory CSs. However, there was no treatment × trial type
interaction (F(1,12) = 1.03 using a visual CS;
F(1,12) = 0.35 using an auditory CS,
p > 0.05) and no other significant differences between
the two groups. These data indicate that pretraining lesions of the
caudal insular cortex did not significantly alter the magnitude of
fear-potentiated startle.
Shock-induced activity
Lesions of IC before training had no effect on an animal's
reaction to foot shock during training. The mean level of reactivity to
foot shock in visual CS training was 1255 ± 196 and 1411 ± 169 and in tone CS training it was 1615 ± 281 and 1563 ± 243, for sham and IC lesion groups, respectively. There were no
statistically significant differences between the two groups. These
data indicate that lesions of posterior parietal insular cortex did not
alter the magnitude of shock-induced activity.
 |
EXPERIMENT 2: PRETRAINING COMBINED LESIONS OF IC AND PoT/PIL OF
THALAMUS |
Experiment 1 showed that electrolytic lesions of the somatosensory
part of insular cortex alone had no effect on acquisition of fear
conditioning or reactivity to foot shock during training. These data
indicate that the insular cortex is either not involved or other
structures are capable of providing somatic pain information to the
amygdala during fear conditioning after removal of insular cortex. As
pointed out in the introductory remarks, the PoT/PIL may also provide
pain inputs to the amygdala, despite the finding that pretraining
lesions of these structures alone did not affect acquisition of fear
conditioning (Romanski and LeDoux, 1992b ; Campeau and Davis, 1995 ). In
Experiment 2, we evaluated the effects of combined lesions of both
posterior parietal insula and PoT/PIN performed before training on the
acquisition of conditioned fear measured with fear-potentiated startle.
Materials and methods
Two groups of animals were used. The first 20 rats were matched
into two subgroups of 10 rats each. The rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions 2-3 d later that were aimed at granular and dysgranular portions of posterior parietal insular cortex and caudal
posterior thalamic areas (PoT/PIL) or sham lesions. After 9-11 d
recovery, all animals were trained by pairing foot shock with a visual
CS and tested for fear-potentiated startle 2 d after training. Two
weeks later, animals had another 2 d training session in which
foot shock was paired with an auditory CS. They were then tested with
the auditory CS the next day. The effects of these lesions on shock
sensitization were also measured on the same group of animals one week
later. The second 20 animals were also matched into two groups of 10 rats each. The same experimental procedures described above were
followed, except that testing with the visual CS occurred 2 d
after initial training and then retraining with the auditory CS
occurred 2 d after testing fear-potentiated startle with the
visual CS. Because there were no statistically significant differences
between these two procedures, the data were combined and presented together.
Results and discussion
Histology
Two rats in the sham group and one in the lesion group died as a
result of anesthesia during surgery. Eight animals in the lesion group
were excluded from the study because of inadequate damage of caudal
insular cortex and PoT/PIL. Some of these animals that had complete
damage of caudal insular cortex but no damage to a crucial region of
thalamus exhibited normal fear-potentiated startle. Thus, a
total of 11 lesioned rats and 18 sham rats were used for the final data
analysis. In these lesioned rats, cortical and thalamic damage covered
all targeted areas, i.e., dorsal bank of caudal insular cortex, PoT,
PIL, and MGM. There was also some limited and inconsistent damage to
the neighboring structures, such as secondary somatosensory cortex,
caudate-putamen, temporal cortex, posterior thalamic nucleus, dorsal
and ventral medical geniculate nuclei, peripeduncular nucleus, lateral
posterior nucleus, and anterior pretectal nucleus. However, no case had
any significant damage of agranular insular cortex. The thalamic lesion
sites did not impinge on amygdalofugal pathways that run ventromedially to the PoT/PIL. Histological reconstructions of the smallest and largest electrolytically induced insular cortex lesions are presented in Figure 3.

View larger version (74K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Histological reconstructions of the smallest
(black) and largest (gray)
combined lesions of posterior parietal insular cortex and posterior
intralaminar nuclei in Experiment 2 on coronal plates from the atlas of
Paxinos and Watson (1986) . The numbers to the left
indicate rostrocaudal levels relative to bregma.
|
|
Fear-potentiated startle
Combined electrolytic lesions of the posterior parietal insular
cortex and PoT/PIL made before training severely disrupted the
acquisition of fear-potentiated startle. Figure
4A shows the mean
amplitude startle responses on the startle stimulus alone and visual CS + startle stimulus trials and the difference scores between these two
trial types (+SEM) for sham (n = 18) and insular lesioned (n = 11) groups. Figure 4B
shows the mean amplitude startle of same animals on the startle
stimulus alone versus auditory CS + startle stimulus trials. Figure 4
shows that the lesioned animals, in comparison with shams, showed a
blockade of fear-potentiated startle to both visual and auditory
CSs.

View larger version (19K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Mean amplitude startle response on startle alone
trials (solid bars), startle + CS trials (open
bars), and difference (+SEM) between startle alone and startle + CS trials (hatched bars) in sham-operated and lesioned
animals. A, Tested with visual CS; B,
tested with auditory CS. The combined pretraining lesion of posterior
parietal insular cortex (IC) and posterior intralaminar
nuclei (PoT/PIL) blocked acquisition of fear-potentiated
startle to both visual and auditory CSs.
|
|
A repeated-measures ANOVA found a significant overall difference
between the visual CS + startle stimulus and startle stimulus alone
trials (F(1,25) = 50.94, p < 0.001) and the auditory CS + startle stimulus and startle stimulus
alone trials (F(1,25) = 24.12, p < 0.001), indicative of fear-potentiated startle to the visual and
auditory CSs. More importantly, there was a significant treatment × trial type interaction (F(1,25) = 29.53, p < 0.01 on visual CS trials;
F(1,25) = 7.87, p < 0.01 on
auditory CS trials), indicating different levels of fear-potentiated
startle in the sham versus lesioned groups. Subsequent t
tests on the difference scores demonstrated significant potentiation to
either the visual or the auditory CSs in the sham animals
(t(17) = 9.38, p < 0.001 and
t(17) = 5.99, p < 0.001, respectively), but no significant potentiation in the lesioned groups
to either visual or auditory CSs (t(10) = 1.18 and 1.73, respectively; p > 0.05). An ANOVA that used
only the startle stimulus alone scores showed no significant differences in baseline startle. These data indicate that combined lesions significantly altered the magnitude of fear-potentiated startle.
Shock-induced activity
As expected of a lesion that disrupts a US pathway, lesions of
both IC and PoT/PIL before training also had an effect on animals' reaction to foot shock during training. The mean level of reactivity to
foot shock was 1586 ± 104 and 811 ± 134 on visual CS trials and 1527 ± 134 and 1068 ± 171 in auditory CS training for
sham and combined lesion groups, respectively. There were no
statistically significant differences of shock activities between
visual and auditory CS trials, but there were significant differences
between sham and lesion groups in both visual CS
(p < 0.01) and auditory CS
(p < 0.05) training sessions. These data
indicate that lesions of insular cortex along with PoT/PIL
significantly attenuated the magnitude of shock-induced activity.
Shock sensitization
Consistent with the results of fear-potentiated startle, combined
lesions of cortex and thalamus also had an effect on shock sensitization. Figure 5 shows the mean
amplitude startle response before and after shock in sham and lesioned
groups. A repeated-measures ANOVA found a significant overall
difference between the pre-shock and post-shock trials,
F(1,25) = 18.67, p < 0.001, indicative of shock sensitization. More importantly, there was a
significant treatment by trial type interaction,
F(1,25) = 8.65, p < 0.05, indicating different levels of shock sensitization in the sham versus
lesioned groups. Subsequent t tests on the post-shock versus pre-shock scores demonstrated significant shock sensitization in the
sham animals (t(17) = 4.05, p < 0.01) but no significant sensitization of startle in the lesioned rats
(t(10) = 1.24, p > 0.05). These
data indicate that lesioned animals had a blockade of shock
sensitization.

View larger version (24K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Mean amplitude startle response on preshock trials
(solid bars), post-shock trials (open
bars), and difference (+SEM) between pre-shock and post-shock
trials (hatched bars) in sham-operated and lesioned
animals. The combined cortical and thalamic lesions blocked shock
sensitization.
|
|
 |
EXPERIMENT 3: POST-TRAINING COMBINED LESIONS OF IC AND PoT/PIL OF
THALAMUS |
Experiment 2 showed that the animals with pretraining lesions of
posterior parietal insular cortex and posterior intralaminar nuclei of
thalamus had a blockade of fear-potentiated startle. In Experiment 3, we evaluated whether the same combined lesions performed after training
would have an effect on the expression of conditioned fear measured by
fear-potentiated startle.
Materials and methods
Thirteen rats were matched into two subgroups of six to seven rats
each and trained by pairing foot shock with a visual CS. Two days
later, rats received bilateral electrolytic lesions aimed at granular
and dysgranular portions of posterior parietal insular cortex and
PoT/PIL or sham lesions. One week later, all animals were tested for
fear-potentiated startle using a light CS.
Results and discussion
Histology
One rat in the lesion group was excluded from the study because of
inadequate damage of caudal insular cortex and PoT/PIL. In the other
rats, the cortical and thalamic lesions were essentially identical to
those in the Experiment 2. Histological reconstructions of lesions of a
representative case are presented in Figure
6.

View larger version (78K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Histological reconstructions of a representative
case with combined post-training lesions of posterior parietal insular
cortex and posterior intralaminar nuclei in Experiment 3 on coronal
plates from the atlas of Paxinos and Watson (1986) . The numbers
to the left indicate rostrocaudal levels relative to
bregma.
|
|
Fear-potentiated startle
Combined electrolytic lesions of the posterior parietal insular
cortex and PoT/PIL performed after training did not block the
expression of fear-potentiated startle to a visual CS. Figure 7 shows the mean amplitude startle
responses on the startle stimulus alone and visual CS + startle
stimulus trials and the difference scores between these two trial types
for sham (n = 6) and lesioned (n = 6)
groups. Figure 7 indicates that post-training lesions only slightly
attenuated fear-potentiated startle.

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Mean amplitude startle response on startle alone
trials (solid bars), startle + visual CS trials
(open bars), and difference (+SEM) between startle alone
and startle + visual CS trials (hatched bars) in
sham-operated and lesioned animals. The post-training lesion of
posterior parietal insular cortex and posterior intralaminar nuclei had
no significant effect on fear-potentiated startle.
|
|
A repeated-measures ANOVA found a significant overall difference
between the visual CS + startle stimulus and startle stimulus alone
trials, F(1,10) = 47.31, p < 0.001, indicative of fear-potentiated startle to a visual CS. However,
there was no significant treatment × trial type interaction,
F(1,10) = 0.28, p > 0.05, indicating equivalent levels of fear-potentiated startle in the sham
versus lesioned groups. An ANOVA that used only the startle stimulus alone scores showed significant differences in baseline startle, F(1,10) = 7.03, p < 0.05. These
data indicate that post-training lesions did not significantly alter
the magnitude of fear-potentiated startle, despite the fact that
lesioned animals had a higher level of baseline startle in comparison
with matched sham animals.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The present studies showed that combined electrolytic lesions of
posterior parietal insular cortex and the posterior intralaminar nuclei
of the thalamus applied before training interrupted the acquisition of
fear-potentiated startle using foot shock as a US. In contrast, lesions
of posterior parietal insular cortex alone had no effect on either
acquisition or expression of fear-potentiated startle. Furthermore, the
same combined cortical and thalamic lesions performed after training
did not prevent expression of conditioned fear to a light CS. In
addition, combined pretraining lesions attenuated shock activity during
training and blocked shock sensitization of the startle reflex as well.
Considered with previous studies, the present results suggest a
parallel cortical (insula-amygdala) and subcortical (thalamoamygdala)
pathway involved in relaying foot shock information to the basolateral amygdala during fear conditioning.
The role of the insular cortex in relaying somatosensory inputs to
the amygdala
The present cortical lesions involved the central portion of the
rhinal cortex, ~1.8-4 mm posterior to bregma in Paxinos and Watson
(1986) . There is a discrepancy regarding whether this area is part of
the perirhinal cortex or the insular cortex. Based on the demarcation
of Paxinos and Watson (1986) , Rosen et al. (1992) and other
investigators (Burwell et al., 1995 ) have referred to this area as
anterior perirhinal cortex. However, a recent comprehensive anatomic
tracing study of the rhinal cortex (Shi and Cassell, 1998a ,b , 1999 )
concluded that the perirhinal cortex begins ~4 mm behind bregma. The
present lesion area corresponds to the posterior portion of parietal
insular cortex, which extends rostrocaudally from about the level of
bregma to the caudal end of the insular cortex (i.e., 4 mm behind bregma).
The present data show that pretraining lesions of posterior parietal
insular cortex had no effect on the acquisition of fear-potentiated startle. This is consistent with previous results from our laboratory that pretraining electrolytic or chemical lesions of central portions of rhinal cortex did not prevent acquisition of fear-potentiated startle (Campeau and Davis, 1995 ). Our results are also supported by
other studies in which extensive pretraining electrolytic lesions of
temporal cortex including caudal insula did not affect fear conditioning using freezing and autonomic responses (blood pressure changes) as measures (Romanski and LeDoux, 1992a ,b ).
Although the cortical lesions alone had no effect on fear conditioning,
combined cortical and thalamic lesions performed before training, but
not after training, did interrupt acquisition of fear-potentiated
startle. These results suggest that the posterior parietal insular
cortex is at least partially involved in the acquisition of fear
conditioning. Because the same lesioned animals also showed a blockade
of shock sensitization and a significant attenuation of the shock
reactivity as well, we would suggest that the role of the insular
cortex is probably to relay foot shock information to the amygdala
during training. This interpretation is consistent with recent
anatomical studies that implicate the parietal insular cortex as a
somatosensory-related structure (Fabri and Burton, 1991 ; Shi and
Cassell, 1998a ).
In contrast to the posterior insular cortex (from 2 mm anterior to
bregma), which is generally accepted as a gustatory cortex, recent
anatomic tracing studies found that the dorsal bank of the parietal
insular cortex (from bregma to 4 mm behind), i.e., the granular and
dysgranular portions, has reciprocal connections with primary and
secondary somatosensory cortices and ventroposterior/posterior thalamic
nuclei as well (Fabri and Burton, 1991 ; Barnett et al., 1995 ; Shi and
Cassell, 1998a ). Furthermore, these cortical and thalamic connections
are topographically organized, indicating a body representation on the
dorsal bank of the parietal insula. Although the head is represented
rostrally, next to the gustatory area, the forelimbs and hindlimbs are
represented more caudally (Shi and Cassell, 1998a ). Thus, the present
cortical lesions correspond to the limb representation on the insular
cortex. Additionally, the parietal insular cortex receives direct
inputs from the midbrain parabrachial nucleus as well as posterior
intralaminar thalamic nuclei (Yasui et al., 1989 ; LeDoux et al., 1990a ;
Shi and Davis, 1997 ), both of which are targeted by afferents arising
from superficial layers of the dorsal horn, and is assumed to
transmit somatic pain information (LeDoux et al., 1987 ; Bernard et al.,
1992 , 1995 ; Feil and Herbert, 1995 ; Jasmin et al., 1997 ). Studies in
humans also indicate that pain stimuli specifically activate the
posterior dorsal insula (Casey et al., 1994 ; Craig et al., 1996 ;
Derbyshire et al., 1997 ), the area corresponding to the parietal insula
in the rat (Shi and Cassell, 1998a ). Taken together, the present behavioral results, plus previous anatomic findings, indicate that the
parietal insular cortex may represent a US pathway relaying foot shock
information to the amygdala during fear conditioning.
Previous studies from this laboratory found that post-training lesions
of the same rostrocaudal extent of insular cortex (~1.8-4 mm
posterior to bregma) completely blocked the expression of
fear-potentiated startle using either a visual or an auditory CS (Rosen
et al., 1992 ; Campeau and Davis, 1995 ). In contrast, in the present
study, lesions of the same rostrocaudal extent of insular cortex had no
significant effect on the expression of fear-potentiated startle. However, in both of the former studies, the lesions also included the
ventral bank of the rhinal sulcus, primarily the agranular part of
insular cortex, which have completely different connections from those
of the granular and dysgranular portions. In fact, Rosen et al. (1992)
even noted that when the lesions were restricted to the dysgranular and
granular insular cortices there was no effect on the expression of the
fear-potentiated startle, consistent with the current results. Although
it is not clear whether lesions of the agranular insular cortex alone
would be sufficient to block the expression of conditioned fear, the
present experiments, as well as previous studies, strongly suggest that
the granular/dysgranular versus agranular portions of posterior
insula may have differential roles in the acquisition and expression of
fear conditioning. Ongoing studies in our laboratory are attempting to
lesion only the agranular cortex to examine this issue.
The role of posterior intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus in
relaying pain information to the amygdala
A posterior group of intralaminar-like nuclei that surround
the medial geniculate nucleus, including PoT, PIL, SG, SPFPC, and
possibly MGM, constitutes a posterior extension of the intralaminar complex (Winer et al., 1988 ). Anatomical tracing studies show that all
of these nuclei receive afferents from the spinal cord (LeDoux et al.,
1987 ; Cliffer et al., 1991 ; Shi and Davis, 1997 ) and in turn project to
the amygdala (LeDoux et al., 1985 , 1990a ; Yasui et al., 1991 ; Shi and
Davis, 1997 ). This spinothalamic pathway arises from neurons in both
superficial and deep layers of the dorsal horn (LeDoux et al., 1987 ;
Dado and Giesler, 1990 ). These spinothalamic projection neurons are
highly responsive to noxious stimuli and may relay nociceptive inputs
to posterior intralaminar nuclei (Dado et al., 1994 ; Katter et al.,
1996 ). Single-unit recording studies found that pain stimuli applied on
the animal's limbs could activate many units in the posterior
intralaminar nuclei, including those that project to the lateral
amygdaloid nucleus (Bordi and LeDoux, 1994 ). Furthermore,
microstimulation within the PIL could serve as an effective
unconditioned stimulus for fear conditioning, in place of standard foot
shock (Cruikshank et al., 1992 ). In agreement with these anatomic and
physiological findings, the present behavioral results further
demonstrate that pretraining lesions of the posterior intralaminar
nuclei, in conjunction with insular cortex, prevent the acquisition of
fear-potentiated startle. All of these data would strongly indicate
that this thalamoamygdaloid pathway might be a US pathway that is
critically involved in emotional learning by relaying nociceptive
inputs to the amygdala.
It has been proposed that the projections from the posterior
intralaminar nuclei provide a pathway parallel with the auditory cortex
by which auditory stimuli can be transmitted to the amygdala and engage
fear and other affective responses (LeDoux et al., 1990b ; Romanski and
LeDoux, 1992b ). However, we believe it is unlikely that the present
thalamic lesions blocked fear conditioning by preventing transmission
of CS information to the amygdala. First of all, lesions of this area
only block fear conditioning to an auditory stimulus in conjunction
with lesions of the auditory cortex but not when they are made by
themselves (Romanski and LeDoux, 1992b ). However, the auditory cortex
was not consistently damaged in our combined lesioned animals. Second,
the present thalamic lesions interrupted fear conditioning using both
acoustic and visual CSs. Despite receiving inputs from the inferior
colliculus and being responsive to acoustic stimuli, the posterior
intralaminar nuclei probably are not involved in relaying any visual
information. Third, the present lesions also significantly attenuated
shock-induced activity and shock sensitization in which no CSs were
involved. Finally, post-training lesions of these areas did not block
the expression of fear-potentiated startle as one would expect of a
lesion that disrupted a CS pathway.
In fact, the current results suggest that the conclusion that
projections from the posterior intralaminar nuclei provide a CS pathway
to the amygdala parallel with the auditory cortex should be considered
with some caution. That conclusion is based on the finding that lesions
of the posterior intralaminar nuclei, in conjunction with lesions of
the auditory cortex, block fear conditioning using an auditory
stimulus, whereas lesions of either area alone are not sufficient to
block fear conditioning (LeDoux et al., 1984 ; Romanski and LeDoux,
1992b ). However, these studies have always used pretraining lesions.
Furthermore, the lesions of the auditory cortex always involved damage
to the rhinal cortex, adjacent to the amygdala. Hence, it is possible
that the blockade of fear conditioning produced by these combined
pretraining lesions of the posterior intralaminar nuclei and the rhinal
cortex adjacent to the amygdala resulted from an interruption of
parallel US pathways required for fear conditioning rather than an
interruption of parallel auditory CS pathways. Indeed, the projections
of the inferior colliculus to the posterior intralaminar nuclei, which are assumed to provide auditory inputs, arise from the shell of the
inferior colliculus, a multimodal area also targeted by somatosensory inputs from the spinal cord (Aitkin et al., 1978 ; Coleman and Clerici,
1987 ; Li and Mizuno, 1997 ). Moreover, our laboratory found that
chemical lesions of the dorsal and ventral medial geniculate nuclei,
but not posterior intralaminar nuclei, were enough to interrupt the
expression of conditioned fear responses to an auditory CS (Campeau and
Davis, 1995 ). Thus, the role of the thalamoamygdala pathway in auditory
CS transmission should be considered cautiously, and further studies
must be performed to clarify this issue.
Parallel cortical and thalamic US pathways in
fear conditioning
Although the present report did not include thalamic lesion alone
experiments, studies by both Romanski and LeDoux (1992b) and Davis
(1995) showed clearly that thalamic lesions alone did not prevent
acquisition of conditioned fear. In the later study (Campeau and Davis,
1995 ), large pretraining lesions of posterior thalamus, including
medial geniculate as well as posterior intralaminar nuclei, prevented
acquisition of fear-potentiated startle to an auditory CS but not to a
visual CS, indicating a blockade of transmission to the auditory CS but
not to a visual CS or, most important for the present study, foot shock US.
On the basis of a combination of anatomical, physiological, and
behavioral studies, we propose that that there are parallel corticoamygdala and thalamoamygdala US pathways that are illustrated in
Figure 8. For simplicity, the CS pathways
and interconnections with agranular insular cortex are not included and
will be discussed elsewhere. During fear conditioning, the US (i.e.,
foot shock) information is transmitted to the amygdala via either
posterior intralaminar nuclei or parietal insular cortex. The posterior intralaminar thalamic nuclei receive shock information directly from
the spinal cord. The parietal insular cortex receives convergent information from leminscal inputs that arise from the primary and
secondary somatosensory cortices and ventroposterior nuclei of the
thalamus, and nonleminscal inputs from posterior and posterior intralaminar thalamic nuclei and the midbrain parabrachial nucleus. Both the parietal insular cortex and posterior intralaminar thalamic nuclei in turn project to the lateral, basolateral, basomedial, and
central nuclei of the amygdala. In contrast, the visual and auditory
inputs from modality specific areas of thalamus and cortex exclusively
or primarily target the lateral amygdaloid nucleus (LeDoux et al.,
1990a ; Romanski and LeDoux, 1993 ; McDonald and Mascagni, 1996 ; Shi and
Cassell, 1997 ). Consequently, only the lateral nucleus of the amygdala
receives both foot shock US inputs and auditory/visual CSs inputs.
Because of this, it may be the site of plasticity for CS-US
associations within the amygdala (LeDoux, 1992a ,b ). Consistent
with this, combined lesions of both parietal insular cortex and
posterior intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus were necessary to
interrupt the transmission of foot shock information to the amygdala
and thus block the acquisition of fear-potentiated startle.
Furthermore, lesions restricted to the lateral amygdaloid nucleus were
sufficient to block the acquisition of fear conditioning as well
(LeDoux et al., 1990b ).

View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
Schematic diagram summarizing
parallel corticoamygdala and thalamoamygdala pain US pathways involved
in fear-potentiated startle. BLA, Basolateral amygdala;
Ce, central amygdaloid nucleus; CRN,
cochlea root neurons; PB, parabrachial nucleus;
PnC, pontine reticular nucleus, caudal;
PoT/PIL, posterior thalamic nucleus, triangular, and
posterior intralaminar thalamic nucleus; VPL/Po,
ventroposterior lateral thalamic nucleus and posterior thalamic
nucleus.
|
|
Besides the insular cortex and posterior intralaminar nuclei of the
thalamus, the parabrachial nucleus may also provide direct nociceptive
inputs to the amygdala (Bernard and Besson, 1990 ; Bernard et al.,
1993 ). However, the projection from the parabrachial nucleus targets
predominantly the central amygdaloid nucleus but not the lateral
amygdaloid nucleus. Although the projections from insular cortex and
posterior intralaminar thalamic nuclei transmit foot shock US
information to the lateral amygdaloid nucleus for sensory-sensory
association, those from the cortex, thalamus, and parabrachial nucleus
to the central amygdaloid nucleus may be involved in nonconditioned
responses, such as modification of shock activity. In fact, lesions of
central nucleus, but not the basolateral amygdala, attenuated shock
reactivity (Hitchcock et al., 1989 ). In the present study, combined
lesions of cortex and thalamus also significantly reduced shock
reactivity, which might have resulted from interrupting shock inputs to
the central nucleus of the amygdala. Finally, because shock
sensitization of startle may reflect rapid context conditioning
(Borszcz et al., 1989 ), blockade of shock sensitization by these
combined lesions may also have resulted from a blockade of the US
pathway required for context conditioning, which we are currently
testing using more traditional procedures to produce context conditioning.
Overall, the present studies implicate the parietal insular
cortex and the posterior intralaminar nucleus of the thalamus as being
parallel US shock pathways necessary for the acquisition of fear
conditioning using the fear-potentiated startle paradigm. It should be
acknowledged, however, that the present lesions were made by passing
electrolytic current, which damages both cell bodies and fibers in the
lesion site. Hence it is not yet possible to assess the relative
contribution of fibers of passage versus cell bodies in these
behavioral effects. Instead, the present results provide a working
model for the US pathways involved in fear conditioning, which can now
be tested more rigorously with other techniques such as chemical
lesioning or local inactivation via transmitter agonists (e.g.,
muscimol) or antagonists (e.g., excitatory amino antagonists).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 14, 1998; revised Oct. 13, 1998; accepted Oct. 16, 1998.
This work was supported by National Institute of Mental Health Grants
MH-57250 and MH-47840, Research Scientist Development Award MH-00004 to
M.D., and a grant from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and
the State of Connecticut.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Changjun Shi, Department of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Emory University School of
Medicine, 1636 Pierce Drive, Suite 4000, Atlanta, GA 30322.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Aitkin L,
Dickhaus H,
Schultz W,
Zimmermann M
(1978)
External nucleus of inferior colliculus: auditory and spinal somatosensory afferents and their interactions.
J Neurophysiol
41:837-847[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Barnett E,
Evans G,
Sun N,
Perlman S,
Cassell M
(1995)
Anterograde tracing of trigeminal afferent pathways from the murine tooth pulp to cortex using herpes simplex virus type 1.
J Neurophysiol
15:2972-2984.
-
Bernard J,
Besson J
(1990)
The spino(trigemino)pontoamygdaloid pathway: electrophysiologial evidence for an involvement in pain process.
J Neurophysiol
63:473-490[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Bernard J,
Dallel R,
Raboisson P,
Villanueva L,
Le Bars D
(1995)
Organization of the efferent projections from the spinal cervical enlargement to the parabrachial area and periaqueductal gray: a PHA-L study in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
353:480-505[ISI][Medline].
-
Bernard JF,
Huang GF,
Besson JM
(1992)
Nucleus centralis of the amygdala and the globus pallidus ventralis: electrophysiological evidence for an involvement in pain processes.
J Neurophysiol
68:551-569[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Bernard J-F,
Alden M,
Besson J-M
(1993)
The organization of the efferent projections from the pontine parabrachial area to the amygdaloid complex: a phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) study in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
329:201-229[ISI][Medline].
-
Bordi F,
LeDoux J
(1994)
Response properties of single units in areas of rat auditory thalamus that project to the amygdala. II. Cells receiving convergent auditory and somatosensory inputs and cells antidromically activated by amygdala stimulation.
Exp Brain Res
98:275-286[ISI][Medline].
-
Borszcz GS,
Cranney J,
Leaton RN
(1989)
Influence of long-term sensitization on long-term habituation of the acoustic startle response in rats: central gray lesions, preexposure and extinction.
J Exp Psychol
15:54-64.
-
Burwell RD,
Witter MP,
Amaral DG
(1995)
Perirhinal and postrhinal cortices of the rat: a review of the neuroanatomical literature and comparison with findings from the monkey brain.
Hippocampus
5:390-408[ISI][Medline].
-
Campeau S,
Davis M
(1992)
Fear potentiation of the acoustic startle reflex using noises of various spectral frequencies as conditioned stimuli.
Anim Learn Behav
20:177-186.
-
Campeau S,
Davis M
(1995)
Involvement of subcortical and cortical afferents to the lateral nucleus of the amygdala in fear conditioning measured with fear-potentiated startle in rats trained concurrently with auditory and visual conditioned stimuli.
J Neurosci
15:2312-2327[Abstract].
-
Casey K,
Minoshima S,
Berger K,
Koeppe R,
Morrow T,
Frey K
(1994)
Positron emission tomographic analysis of cerebral structures activated specifically by repetitive noxious heat stimuli.
J Neurophysiol
71:802-807[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cassella JV,
Davis M
(1986)
The design and calibration of a startle measurement systems.
Physiol Behav
36:377-383[Medline].
-
Cliffer KD,
Burstein R,
Giesler Jr GJ
(1991)
Distributions of spinothalamic, spinohypothalamic, and spinotelencephalic fibers revealed by anterograde transport of PHA-L in rats.
J Neurosci
11:852-868[Abstract].
-
Coleman J,
Clerici W
(1987)
Sources of projections to subdivisions of the inferior colliculus in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
262:215-226[ISI][Medline].
-
Craig A,
Bushnell M,
Zhang E,
Blomqvist A
(1994)
A thalamic nucleus specific for pain and temperature sensation.
Nature
372:770-773[Medline].
-
Craig A,
Reiman E,
Evans A,
Bushnell M
(1996)
Functional imaging of an illusion of pain.
Nature
384:258-260[Medline].
-
Cruikshank SJ,
Edeline JM,
Weinberger NM
(1992)
Stimulation at a site of auditory-somatosensory convergence in the medial geniculate nucleus is an effective unconditioned stimulus for fear conditioning.
Behav Neurosci
106:471-483[ISI][Medline].
-
Dado R,
Giesler GJ
(1990)
Afferent input to nucleus submedius in rats: retrograde labeling of neurons in the spinal cord and caudal medulla.
J Neurosci
10:2672-2686[Abstract].
-
Dado R,
Katter J,
Giesler GJJ
(1994)
Spinothalamic and spinohypothalamic tract neurons in the cervical enlargement of rats. II. Responses to innocuous and noxious mechanical and thermal stimuli.
J Neurophysiol
71:981-1002[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Davis M
(1992)
The role of the amygdala in conditioned fear.
In: The amygdala: neurobiological aspects of emotion, memory, and mental dysfunction (Aggleton J,
ed), pp 255-305. New York: Wiley.
-
Davis M,
Falls WA,
Campeau S,
Kim M
(1993)
Fear-potentiated startle: a neural and pharmacological analysis.
Behav Brain Res
58:175-198[ISI][Medline].
-
Davis M,
Rainnie D,
Cassell M
(1994)
Neurotransmission in the rat amygdala related to fear and anxiety.
Trends Neurosci
17:208-214[ISI][Medline].
-
Derbyshire S,
Jones A,
Gyulai F,
Clark S,
Townsend D,
Firestone L
(1997)
Pain processing during three levels of noxious stimulation produces differential patterns of central activity.
Pain
73:431-445[ISI][Medline].
-
Everitt BJ,
Morris KA,
O'Brien A,
Robbins TW
(1991)
The basolateral amygdala-ventral striatal system and conditioned place preference: further evidence of limbic-striatal interactions underlying reward-related processes.
Neuroscience
42:1-18[ISI][Medline].
-
Fabri M,
Burton H
(1991)
Ipsilateral cortical connections of primary somatic sensory cortex in rats.
J Comp Neurol
311:405-424[ISI][Medline].
-
Feil K,
Herbert H
(1995)
Topographic organization of spinal and trigeminal somatosensory pathways to the rat parabrachial and Kollike-Fuse nuclei.
J Comp Neurol
353:506-528[ISI][Medline].
-
Friedman D,
Murray E
(1986)
Thalamic connectivity of the second somatosensory area and neighboring somatosensory fields of the lateral sulcus of the macaque.
J Comp Neurol
252:348-373[ISI][Medline].
-
Hitchcock JM,
Sananes CB,
Davis M
(1989)
Sensitization of the startle reflex by foot shock: blockade by lesions of the central nucleus of the amygdala or its efferent pathway to the brainstem.
Behav Neurosci
103:509-518[ISI][Medline].
-
Jasmin L,
Burkey A,
Card J,
Basbaum A
(1997)
Transneuronal labeling of a nociceptive pathway, the spino-(trigemino-)parabrachio-amygdaloid, in the rat.
J Neurosci
17:3751-3765[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kapp BS,
Whalen PJ,
Supple WF,
Pascoe JP
(1992)
Amygdaloid contributions to conditioned arousal and sensory information processing.
In: The amygdala: neurobiological aspects of emotion, memory, and mental dysfunction (Aggleton JP,
ed), pp 229-254. New York: Wiley.
-
Katter J,
Dado R,
Kostarczyk E,
Giesler GJ
(1996)
Spinothalamic and spinohypothalamic tract neurons in the sacral spinal cord of rats. II. Responses to cutaneous and visceral stimuli.
J Neurophysiol
75:2606-2628[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
LeDoux JE
(1992a)
Brain mechanisms of emotion and emotional learning.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
2:191-197[Medline].
-
LeDoux JE
(1992b)
Emotion and the amygdala.
In: The amygdala: neurobiological aspects of emotion, memory, and mental dysfunction (Aggleton JP,
ed), pp 339-352. New York: Wiley.
-
LeDoux JE,
Sakaguchi A,
Reis DJ
(1984)
Subcortical efferent projections of the medial geniculate nucleus mediate emotional responses conditioned to acoustic stimuli.
J Neurosci
4:683-698[Abstract].
-
LeDoux JE,
Ruggiero DA,
Reis DJ
(1985)
Projections to the subcortical forebrain from anatomically defined regions of the medial geniculate body in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
242:182-213[ISI][Medline].
-
LeDoux JE,
Ruggiero DA,
Forest R,
Stornetta R,
Reis DJ
(1987)
Topographic organization of convergent projections to the thalamus from the inferior colliculus and spinal cord in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
264:123-146[ISI][Medline].
-
LeDoux JE,
Iwata J,
Cicchetti P,
Reis DJ
(1988)
Different projections of the central amygdaloid nucleus mediate autonomic and behavioral correlates of conditioned fear.
J Neurosci
8:2517-2529[Abstract].
-
LeDoux JE,
Farb C,
Ruggiero DA
(1990a)
Topographic organization of neurons in the acoustic thalamus that project to the amygdala.
J Neurosci
10:1043-1054[Abstract].
-
LeDoux JE,
Cicchetti P,
Xagoraris A,
Romanski LM
(1990b)
The lateral amygdaloid nucleus, sensory interface of the amygdala in fear conditioning.
J Neurosci
10:1062-1069[Abstract].
-
Li H,
Mizuno N
(1997)
Collateral projections from single neurons in the dorsal column nuclei to the inferior colliculus and the ventrobasal thalamus: a retrograde double-labeling study in the rat.
Neurosci Lett
225:21-24[Medline].
-
Mascagni F,
McDonald AJ,
Coleman JR
(1993)
Corticoamygdaloid and corticocortical projections of the rat temporal cortex: a phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin study.
Neuroscience
57:697-715[ISI][Medline].
-
McDonald AJ,
Jackson TR
(1987)
Amygdaloid connections with posterior insular and temporal cortical areas in the rat.
J Comp Neurol
262:59-77[ISI][Medline].
-
McDonald AJ,
Mascagni F
(1996)
Cortico-cortical and cortico-amygdaloid projections of the rat occipital cortex: a phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin study.
Neuroscience
71:37-54[ISI][Medline].
-
Paxinos G,
Watson C
(1986)
In:
|