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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2001, 21(15):5773-5780
Different Requirements for Protein Synthesis in Acquisition and
Extinction of Spatial Preferences and Context-Evoked Fear
K. Matthew
Lattal and
Ted
Abel
Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania 19104
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ABSTRACT |
Many molecular accounts of long-term memory storage postulate that
the synthesis of new proteins is necessary for long-term changes in
neuronal function. These experiments generally have examined the
learning that occurs as associations are acquired between neutral and
biologically important stimuli. Little is known about the importance of
protein synthesis in the establishment of memories for extinction,
which occurs as the relations established during acquisition are
severed. Extinction appears to be an active learning process that
results in the formation of new memories rather than in the simple
erasure or forgetting of memories from acquisition. Furthermore, under
certain circumstances, extinction can result in long-term changes in
behavior lasting for days to weeks. Here we show that although memories
for the acquisition of spatial and contextual learning required protein
synthesis, memories for extinction formed in the absence of protein
synthesis. These results suggest that acquisition and extinction are
mediated by distinct molecular mechanisms and that long-term memories
can form in the absence of protein synthesis.
Key words:
memory; extinction; protein synthesis; spatial learning; fear conditioning; hippocampus
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INTRODUCTION |
As memories are acquired and
consolidated, a cascade of events involving a variety of intracellular
signaling molecules occurs (see Abel and Lattal, 2001 ). Some of these
transduction cascades ultimately result in gene induction and protein
synthesis, which are thought to be necessary for long-term memory
(Flood et al., 1973 ; Davis and Squire, 1984 ; Abel et al., 1997 ). The
requirement for protein synthesis during acquisition has been
demonstrated in many forms of learning, including spatial learning in
the Morris water maze and Pavlovian associative learning in contextual
fear conditioning (Abel et al., 1997 ; Bourtchouladze et al., 1998 ; Meiri and Rosenblum, 1998 ). In the water maze, animals must learn and
remember the location of an escape platform hidden just beneath the
surface of a pool of opaque water. In contextual fear conditioning, animals learn that a conditioning context signals the occurrence of a
foot shock. Memories for spatial learning and contextual fear
conditioning are revealed in behavior as a search preference for the
platform location and as a context-evoked freezing response, respectively. The importance of protein synthesis in spatial learning and fear conditioning has been demonstrated during the learning that
occurs as animals form memories of excitatory relations among environmental stimuli.
Little is known about the involvement of protein synthesis in
extinction, which occurs when the relations among stimuli established during acquisition are severed. During extinction, previously established responses are suppressed, resulting in long-term changes in
behavior. Preferences for a spatial location decrease in the water maze
as the animal learns that the cues no longer predict the location of
that platform, and fear evoked by a context decreases as animals learn
that the context is no longer predictive of shock. Many experiments
have shown that extinction is an active learning process that results
in new memories rather than in the erasure or forgetting of memories
established during acquisition (Pavlov, 1927 ; Bouton, 1993 ; Rescorla,
2001 ). Indeed, although the behavior in the presence of a previously
conditioned stimulus is attenuated during extinction, the original
association is surprisingly unaffected (for review, see Rescorla,
2001 ). This suggests that the processes that operate during extinction
act to suppress rather than erase the original learning. Defining the
nature of this depressive process has led to many important behavioral
theories about the extinction process (e.g., Pavlov, 1927 ; Konorski,
1967 ; Rescorla and Wagner, 1972 ; Bouton, 1993 ; Rescorla, 1993 ).
Although much is now known about the behavioral properties of
extinction, very little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms and the extent to which they are similar to mechanisms of
acquisition. Several experiments have shown that the NMDA type of
glutamate receptor, which appears to be critical for certain types of
associative learning, also may play a role in extinction (Falls et al.,
1992 ; Baker and Azorlosa, 1996 ; Johnson et al., 2000 ). Two other
processes, protein synthesis and gene transcription, appear to be
critical for acquisition. Because extinction, like acquisition, results
in long-term memories and requires NMDA receptor activation, one might
expect that the requirement for protein synthesis would be similar in
establishing memories for acquisition and extinction.
In the following experiments, we assessed the role of protein synthesis
in acquisition and extinction of spatial learning and contextual fear
conditioning in C57BL/6 mice. The protein synthesis inhibitor
anisomycin was administered either during acquisition or during
extinction to isolate the effects of protein synthesis inhibition on
acquisition and extinction independently. Anisomycin blocked the
initial acquisition of a spatial preference and also blocked the
formation of a new preference trained during a reversal procedure;
however, anisomycin had no effect on the extinction of a previously
established preference. Similarly, although anisomycin blocked the
acquisition of context-evoked fear, it had no effect on the extinction
of previously established fear. These experiments show that acquisition
and extinction of hippocampus-dependent spatial and contextual tasks
may be mediated by fundamentally distinct molecular mechanisms, and
they suggest that protein synthesis-independent mechanisms can mediate
long-term changes in behavior.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects. Male and female C57BL/6 mice bred in our
animal facility from mice originally obtained from The Jackson
Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME) were used in the experiments. They were
8-12 weeks old and had free access to food and water in their home cages. All experiments were conducted according to National Institutes of Health guidelines for animal care and use and were approved by the
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Pennsylvania.
Injections. Anisomycin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) was diluted in
saline and dissolved in 1N HCl. NaOH (1N) was added to the solution until the pH was ~7. Mice received subcutaneous injections of 150 mg
of anisomycin/kg of body weight or an equivalent volume of saline. This
amount of anisomycin has been shown to yield >90% protein synthesis
inhibition in the brain during the first 2 hr and >60% inhibition
during the next 2 hr (Flood et al., 1973 ). All injections occurred 30 min before each session or immediately after each session, depending on
the experiment.
Water maze acquisition. The water maze was a circular pool
(120 cm in diameter). White tempera nontoxic paint was mixed with water
to make the surface opaque. Hidden 0.5 cm beneath the surface of the
water was a circular platform (11.2 cm in diameter), which was placed
in a constant location throughout acquisition training. During
acquisition and reversal training, mice received 4 trials/d, in which
they searched for the hidden platform for a maximum of 60 sec. After
finding the platform, mice remained there for 20 sec. These trials were
separated by an intertrial interval (ITI) of 4-6 min (which was used
in all subsequent water maze experiments). The path of the mouse was
recorded using a video tracking system (HVS Image). In the acquisition
experiment (Fig. 1), mice received injections of anisomycin
(n = 8) or saline (n = 16) before each training session. On the day after the fifth acquisition session, all
mice received injections of saline and then received a probe trial in
which swimming paths in the absence of the platform were recorded for
60 sec. Preference for a target was assessed by analyzing time spent
searching in the target quadrant compared with the other three
quadrants. Preference for the target quadrant was also compared with
time spent in the most-preferred nontarget location [Maximum Nontarget
(MN)] calculated for each individual mouse. The MN measure also allows
us to assess the searching abilities of mice that show no target
preference. Mice that engage in a directed search should show a
preference for one of the quadrants, but if they swim randomly, no
preference should be evident in any quadrant (Riedel et al., 1999 ).
The effects of anisomycin on general performance were assessed in a
nonspatial version of the water maze, in which mice given anisomycin
(n = 8) or saline (n = 8) searched for
a platform that had a visible cue attached to it (Fig. 2). During
visible platform training, the platform was placed in different
locations on each of the 4 trials/d for 3 consecutive days.
Water maze reversal. In the reversal experiment (Fig. 3),
mice were trained to find the platform in the original location for
7 d. No injections were administered during the initial training. Preference during a probe trial on the day after the end of acquisition (P1) was used to assign mice to groups that would receive anisomycin or
saline during reversal. Any mouse that showed <30% preference for the
target location during P1 was dropped from the experiment before
reversal training (n = 3). Before each reversal
session, mice received injections of anisomycin (n = 8)
or saline (n = 11). During reversal, the platform was
moved to the opposite side of the pool. Mice received 4 trials/d of
reversal training for 8 d. Two probe trials assessed preferences
during reversal training, one after the fourth session of reversal
training (P2) and another after the eighth session of reversal training
(P3). After reversal training, all mice were retrained to the original
location for four sessions, during which they received no injections,
followed by a fourth probe trial (P4). All mice received injections of saline 30 min before the probe trials, which occurred 24 hr after the
most recent training session. The next training session began 24 hr
after the probe trial.
Water maze extinction. In the simple extinction experiment
(Fig. 4), mice were trained to find the platform in the original location for 10 d in the absence of anisomycin or saline
injections. They were assigned to groups on the basis of their
performance during the probe trial after acquisition, and mice that
spent <30% of the probe trial in the target quadrant were dropped
from the experiment before extinction (n = 3). During
extinction training, mice received injections of anisomycin
(n = 10) or saline (n = 8) before each
session and received four 60 sec trials/d in which they swam in the
pool in the absence of the platform. On the day after the fourth
session of extinction, a probe trial was run in which all mice swam
after saline injections.
Contextual fear conditioning. Three contextual fear
conditioning experiments used a total of 102 mice. In the first (Fig. 5A), 30 min before fear conditioning, mice received
injections of saline (n = 24) or anisomycin
(n = 7). Mice were placed into a conditioning chamber
made of Plexiglas (either a 23 × 23 × 23 cm cube or a
21.5-cm-diameter × 23-cm-high circular chamber) and received a 2 sec 1.5 mA scrambled foot shock from a grid floor (Med Associates,
Inc.) 2 and 2.5 min after placement into the chamber. Mice were removed
from the chamber after a total of 3 min. Extinction began the following
day. All of the mice that received injections of anisomycin before
conditioning received injections of saline before extinction (group
Ani/Sal, n = 7); mice that received injections of
saline before conditioning received injections of anisomycin (group
Sal/Ani, n = 12) or saline (group Sal/Sal;
n = 12) before extinction sessions. Extinction
consisted of two 3 min exposures to the conditioning chamber in the
absence of shock for 3 d. Each exposure was separated by a 15-20
min ITI. The fourth day was a test session, in which all mice received injections of saline and received two additional extinction trials. Mice received an identical test 10 d later. Conditioning was
assessed by measuring freezing behavior (Fanselow, 1980 ). The behavior of each mouse was sampled at 5 sec intervals, and the percentage of
those intervals in which the mouse froze was calculated.
The second contextual fear conditioning experiment (Fig. 5B)
was identical to the first, except mice received injections of anisomycin (n = 8) or saline (n = 8)
immediately after conditioning and after extinction and received only
one extinction trial per day.
In the third contextual fear conditioning experiment (Fig.
5C), mice received spaced conditioning, which consisted of
two 3 min exposures to the context with a shock 2.5 min after placement into the chamber. Extinction was identical to conditioning in this
experiment, except that no shock was presented. The ITI during conditioning and extinction was 15-20 min. As in the second fear conditioning experiment, injections occurred immediately after conditioning or extinction. To determine whether there were effects of
anisomycin on the long-term consolidation of the memory for acquisition, additional groups of mice received injections but remained
in their home cages during extinction [groups Ani No Ext
(n = 8) and Sal No Ext (n = 8)]. They
were tested for retention with the other groups.
Statistical analysis. ANOVAs were performed in all
experiments. Simple planned comparisons were made using Student's
t test.
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RESULTS |
Spatial learning: acquisition
The requirement for protein synthesis during the acquisition of
spatial preferences is evident in Figure
1. Injection of the protein synthesis
inhibitor anisomycin before each training session in the hidden version
of the Morris water maze caused higher latencies to find the platform
(Fig. 1A) (F(1,22) = 20.3; p < 0.001) and resulted in no reliable
improvement in latency to find the platform from the first to last
block of trials. The probe trial, in which spatial preferences were
recorded in the absence of the platform, revealed that anisomycin
blocked the formation of a spatial preference for the target location
(Fig. 1B-D). During this probe trial, mice that
received injections of saline spent more time searching the target
quadrant than did mice that received injections of anisomycin
(F(1,32) = 9.4; p < 0.01), which showed no preference for the target quadrant. It is not
clear from Figure 1C whether the anisomycin-treated mice
swam randomly in the pool or engaged in a directed search in the wrong
location. Calculating the most preferred nontarget quadrant (Fig.
1D, MN) for each individual mouse
revealed that anisomycin-treated mice spent time swimming preferentially in a particular quadrant (Fig. 1D),
but they were no better than chance at searching in the correct
quadrant (Fig. 1C). Saline-treated mice showed a preference
for the target relative to the maximum nontarget quadrant
(t(16) = 4.1; p < 0.001), indicating that they had acquired a spatial preference for the
target location. Anisomycin had no effect on the acquisition of a
nonspatial version of this task, suggesting that it is unlikely that
the spatial learning deficit is caused by significant deficits in
performance (Fig. 2). Both groups
acquired the visual task, as evidenced by their decreased latencies
(F(5,70) = 6.2; p < 0.001).

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Figure 1.
Protein synthesis is required for the acquisition
of spatial preferences in the Morris water maze. A, Mean
escape latencies during the 5 d of acquisition of spatial learning
under anisomycin (filled squares) or saline
(open squares). Data are presented in blocks of two
trials. B, Representative paths during the probe trial
shown for mice that received anisomycin or saline during reversal. The
path is shown for the mouse from each group closest to the median of
time spent searching in the target quadrant, the number of target
platform crossings, total path length, percentage of time floating, and
percentage of time thigmotactic. C, Preference during a
60 sec probe trial for the training quadrant location
(Targ) for mice given anisomycin (shaded
bars) or saline (open bars) during training.
Time spent in the adjacent left (AL), adjacent right
(AR), and opposite (Opp) quadrants also
is shown. D, Preference during the probe for the
training quadrant location (Targ) compared with the
maximum nontarget (MN). The MN was
calculated by determining each animal's most preferred nontarget
quadrant. Error bars indicate SE.
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Figure 2.
Protein synthesis inhibition does not disrupt the
acquisition of a nonspatial visible platform task. Mice given
anisomycin (filled squares) or saline
(open squares) acquired the task at the same rate. Data
are presented in blocks of two trials over the 3 d of training.
Error bars indicate SE.
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Spatial learning: reversal
Having established that anisomycin blocks the acquisition of
spatial learning, we next examined whether protein synthesis inhibition
during spatial extinction would impair memory for extinction. When the
relation between a specific location and the distal cues established
during acquisition is severed, mice given anisomycin should perseverate
in their preference for the originally trained location if they
remember nothing from the extinction experience. There are several ways
to extinguish an established preference in the water maze (Lattal and
Abel, 2000 ). We first used a reversal procedure in which mice initially
were trained to form a spatial preference for one location with no
saline or anisomycin injections and then were trained under anisomycin
or saline to swim to the platform after it had been moved to the
opposite side of the pool. This reversal procedure has the advantage of
allowing a simultaneous comparison of the effects of anisomycin on the
acquisition of a preference for the reversal location with its effects
on the extinction of a previously established preference for the
original location. For mice that receive injections of saline during
reversal training, preference for the original location should
extinguish as preference for the reversal location is acquired (Lattal
and Abel, 2000 ). For mice that receive injections of anisomycin, the originally established preference might remain during reversal training, because anisomycin might be expected to block the formation of all memories of the reversal experience.
As can be seen in Figure 3, although
protein synthesis inhibition blocked the acquisition of a preference
for a reversal location, it had no effect on the extinction of a
preference for an originally trained location. After seven sessions of
acquisition in the absence of injections, mice showed a robust
preference for the original location (Fig. 3C,
P1, O). On the first reversal trial, the two groups did not differ in latency to reach the reversal target (Ani,
53.7 sec; Sal, 49.5 sec; p > 0.05) or in the time
spent searching in the original target quadrant (Ani, 48.6%; Sal,
49.4%; p > 0.05), again suggesting that anisomycin
did not adversely affect performance. Although there were no
differences in latencies during acquisition under no drug
(F(1,17) < 1.0), there were reliable differences during reversal (F(1,17)=15.9; p < 0.001) as well as reliable decreases across sessions (Fig.
3A) (F(7,119) = 11.3, p < 0.001). A probe trial during reversal revealed
that the latency decreases during the first four sessions of reversal
did not reflect the development of preferences for the reversal
quadrant (Fig. 3C, P2, R) but instead
likely reflected a wider search strategy as the preference for the
original location was extinguished. This probe trial also revealed that
the preference for the original location had decreased by the same
amount in both groups, which demonstrates that protein synthesis was
not required for the formation of memories for the absence of the
platform in its original location. After an additional four sessions of
reversal training, mice that received injections of saline acquired a
preference for the reversal location (Fig. 3C,
P3, R) compared with the maximum nontarget location (t(10) = 3.6;
p < 0.001) and differed reliably from
anisomycin-treated mice in preference for the reversal location
(t(17) = 2.5; p < 0.05). Mice that received injections of anisomycin failed to acquire a
preference for the reversal location, although they continued to
remember that the target was no longer located in the original position.

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Figure 3.
Protein synthesis is not required for extinction
of a previously established preference during reversal training.
A, Mean escape latencies during the seven sessions of
acquisition training without injections, the eight sessions of reversal
training under either anisomycin (filled squares)
or saline (open squares), and the four sessions of
retraining without injections. B, Representative paths
during the probe trials for mice that received anisomycin or saline
during reversal. The paths from each probe trial were chosen on the
basis of the criteria described in the legend to Figure 1.
C, Preference for the original
(O), reversal (R), and
maximum nontarget (MN) locations during the four
probe trials (P1-P4) in groups that received
anisomycin (shaded bars) or saline (open
bars) during reversal. Error bars indicate SE.
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After reversal training, all mice were retrained to the original
location with no injections. There was a large change in latencies from
the last reversal session to the first retraining session in the saline
group (t(8) = 2.6; p < 0.01) but not in the anisomycin group, although the difference in
latencies during the first retraining session was not reliable (Fig.
3A). Because the anisomycin group did not acquire a new
preference during reversal, that group may have been in a better
position to relearn the original location, but by the end of the fourth
session of retraining, the two groups showed a similar preference for
the original location (Fig. 3C, P4)
(F(1,17) > 21.0; p < 0.001), suggesting that anisomycin injections did not cause long-term
changes in learning ability (Fig. 3C, P4).
These findings suggest a dissociation between the requirement for
protein synthesis during acquisition of new spatial preferences and
extinction of old spatial preferences. A demonstration of this with the
reversal procedure is particularly powerful, because this task results
in two simultaneously trained long-term memories within each subject,
one for the absence of the platform in the original location and
another for the presence of the platform in the reversal location.
During reversal, mice given anisomycin remembered that the platform was
no longer placed in the original position (as demonstrated by their
decreased preference for the original quadrant), but they could not
learn the new location of the platform (as demonstrated by their
failure to preferentially search in the reversal quadrant). Thus,
although anisomycin blocked acquisition of a new preference, it had no
effect on the extinction of a previously established preference,
suggesting that acquisition and extinction are mediated by distinct
molecular mechanisms.
Spatial learning: simple extinction
Although there are many advantages to the reversal procedure, one
of the difficulties in assessing the contribution of protein synthesis
to extinction in this procedure is that the rate of extinction of the
original preference is confounded with the rate of acquisition of the
new preference. To examine the effects of anisomycin on the course of
extinction more directly, we extinguished preferences by repeatedly
placing mice into the pool in the absence of the hidden platform, which
had been placed in a constant location throughout acquisition training.
Analyses of preferences for the training quadrant during extinction
(Fig. 4) revealed only a reliable main
effect of session (F(3,51) = 14.3;
p < 0.001), suggesting that the groups did not differ
during extinction. A comparison of preferences during the acquisition
probe trial with preferences during the probe trial after extinction
found that target quadrant preference in both groups decreased after
extinction (F(1,17) = 11.3;
p < 0.01) and that there were no group differences in target preference after extinction
(F(1,17) < 1.0). This suggests that
the extinction treatment resulted in a decreased preference for the
target quadrant that was independent of protein synthesis. Taken
together, the findings from the reversal and simple extinction experiments show that memories during extinction of spatial preferences can form in the absence of protein synthesis.

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Figure 4.
Extinction in the absence of the platform does not
require protein synthesis. Preference for the original target location
is shown at the end of acquisition, during extinction, and after
extinction. No injections occurred during acquisition. Mice received
injections of either anisomycin (filled squares)
or saline (open squares) during extinction. Error bars
indicate SE. The test occurred on the day after the final extinction
session. E1-E4, Extinction sessions 1-4.
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Contextual fear conditioning
The generality of the findings from the Morris water maze
experiments was examined by assessing the effects of anisomycin on the
acquisition and extinction of context-evoked fear. Although these two
tasks have different requirements for performance, they share a common
dependence on the hippocampus (e.g., Abel et al., 1997 ). As can be seen
in Figure 5, three contextual fear
conditioning experiments using different conditioning and extinction
parameters revealed a similar pattern of results: anisomycin disrupted
the establishment of memories for contextual fear but had no effect on
memories for extinction when it was administered to mice that were
conditioned in the presence of saline. During the first extinction trial, which served as a memory test for acquisition, mice that received injections of anisomycin before or immediately after fear
conditioning (group Ani/Sal) froze less than did mice that received
injections of saline (groups Sal/Ani and Sal/Sal; p < 0.001). This is consistent with previous findings that the memory for
the acquisition of contextual fear conditioning is dependent on protein
synthesis (Abel et al., 1997 ).

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Figure 5.
Protein synthesis is required for the
acquisition but not the extinction of context-evoked fear. Mean percent
freezing throughout the course of extinction after contextual fear
conditioning is shown for groups that received anisomycin during
acquisition and saline during extinction (Ani/Sal; filled
triangles), saline during conditioning and anisomycin during
extinction (Sal/Ani; filled squares), and saline during
both conditioning and extinction (Sal/Sal; open
squares). A, Two massed shocks during
conditioning and two spaced context exposures per day during
extinction. Injections occurred before conditioning and extinction.
Test 1 (T1) occurred the day after the final extinction
session. Test 2 (T2) occurred 10 d after
extinction. B, Two massed shocks with postconditioning
injections and one context exposure per day during extinction with
post-trial injections. C, Two spaced shocks during
conditioning with postconditioning injections and two spaced context
exposures during extinction with post-trial injections. Groups Ani No
Ext (filled circles) and Sal No Ext (open
circles) were conditioned and received injections with the
other groups but did not receive extinction. Error bars indicate
SE.
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Fear decreased similarly during extinction in groups given saline or
anisomycin during extinction in each experiment
(p < 0.001), suggesting that anisomycin did not
block memories for extinction. There also were no differences among the
groups when tested under saline (Fig. 5, T1)
(F < 1.0), which shows that the memory established
during extinction was independent of protein synthesis. Levels of
freezing were similar during a retention test 10 d after
extinction, showing that the memories for extinction were retained for
long periods (Fig. 5A, T2). Although conditioned responding often shows spontaneous recovery after long retention intervals after extinction (e.g., Rescorla, 1997 ), all groups that
received extinction in our experiments continued to show low levels of
freezing after the 10 d retention interval. The failure to observe
spontaneous recovery is not necessarily surprising, because spontaneous
recovery often is a transient phenomenon and may depend critically on
the conditions for performance as well as the amount of extinction and
the retention interval (e.g., Rosas and Bouton, 1996 ). The observation
that context-evoked freezing continued to be low 10 d after
extinction suggests that the changes in behavior that occurred during
extinction were long-lasting and independent of protein synthesis.
The similar pattern of results found in these three fear conditioning
experiments is important because they occurred with different training
and injection protocols. The results shown in Figure 5A were
obtained using a spaced extinction protocol with pretrial injections.
Neither decreasing the number of extinction trials per day nor
administering post-trial injections revealed an effect of anisomycin on
the rate of extinction (Fig. 5B). Spaced extinction trials
with post-trial injections also resulted in no differences between mice
that received injections of anisomycin or saline (Fig. 5C).
Thus, the same general pattern of results occurred under a variety of
extinction protocols and with both pretrial and post-trial injections
of anisomycin, which controls for potential effects of anisomycin on
performance during extinction.
The fear conditioning results shown in Figure 5C also
demonstrate that the decrement observed during extinction was
attributable to a learning process and not to simple forgetting or
erasure of the previously established memory. Mice that received
injections but not extinction did not differ and showed higher levels
of freezing than the groups that underwent extinction (Fig.
5C) (p < 0.001), suggesting that
anisomycin injections over 3 d did not disrupt long-term
consolidation or retention of the memory for contextual fear
established during acquisition. This demonstrates that the decrement
during extinction evident in Figure 5 cannot be attributable to
forgetting the original learning or to the interference of anisomycin
with long-term consolidation of the original learning (Riedel et al.,
1999 ) but instead is attributable to the long-term changes in behavior
caused by extinction. Thus, as in spatial learning, there is a
dissociation between the requirement for protein synthesis in the
memories formed during acquisition and extinction of context-evoked fear.
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DISCUSSION |
The critical finding from these experiments is that long-term
memories can form in the absence of protein synthesis. Although protein
synthesis was required for the acquisition of spatial preferences and
contextual fear conditioning, memories for extinction occurred in the
absence of protein synthesis. Many experiments have shown that instead
of erasing the original memory for acquisition, extinction results in
the establishment of new memories that can be retrieved long after the
original learning has occurred (Bouton, 1993 ). Our findings therefore
suggest that these long-term changes in memory can occur through
protein synthesis-independent mechanisms.
These experiments also demonstrate a strong requirement for protein
synthesis during acquisition of spatial learning and context-evoked fear. This is consistent with many findings from experiments using a
variety of subjects and preparations (e.g., Abel et al., 1997 ; Bourtchouladze et al., 1998 ; Meiri and Rosenblum, 1998 ). In a spatial
learning experiment, Meiri and Rosenblum (1998) found that anisomycin
administered during acquisition blocked decreases in latencies to find
the hidden platform, but because there was not a probe trial in that
study, it is difficult to know the degree to which spatial learning was
affected. Our probe trials revealed profound deficits in search paths
after acquisition had occurred in the presence of anisomycin, thus
reinforcing the idea that protein synthesis is important for spatial learning.
The effect on initial acquisition is strengthened by the similar effect
on the acquisition of a reversal preference in the water maze. The
deficit in the reversal experiment is important because it shows that
mice that have formed a spatial preference before anisomycin injections
do not form a new preference when subsequently trained in the presence
of anisomycin. Cain and colleagues (1998) have found that the
role of certain neurotransmitter systems in spatial learning is
dependent on whether the animals are familiar with the behavioral
requirements of the task. A similar conclusion can be drawn from the
work of Bannerman et al. (1995) , who found that the formation of a
spatial preference in one swimming pool protects animals against the
deleterious effects of NMDA receptor blockade. In our reversal
experiment, the initial training established the basic search behaviors
necessary for forming a preference, which means that any effect during
reversal cannot be caused by unfamiliarity with the task. Instead, the
failure of mice to develop a reversal preference under anisomycin
demonstrates a learning or memory deficit as opposed to a performance deficit.
The procedures used in our experiments allow us to make strong
inferences about the role of protein synthesis particularly on the
extinction process without being confounded by residual effects on
acquisition. In many experiments that use the reversal technique, the
manipulation of interest occurs before initial acquisition, meaning
that groups that differ in reversal learning often differ in
acquisition learning, which makes performance during reversal difficult
to interpret. A similar problem has been faced in experiments examining
the effects of a neurobiological manipulation on extinction of fear
conditioning (see Falls and Davis, 1995 ). In our experiments,
extinction was investigated in groups that had acquired the task under
normal conditions. Thus, in each experiment, performance during
extinction was not confounded by residual effects of different
acquisition treatments. Similarly, because the duration of acquisition
and extinction trials was identical, the effects of protein synthesis
inhibition were not confounded with differential exposure to the
stimuli during acquisition and extinction. We also used both pretrial and post-trial injections, which strengthens the idea that our results
do not reflect differential effects on performance during acquisition
and extinction. Thus, the striking difference between the effectiveness
of anisomycin injections on acquisition and extinction appears to be
attributable specifically to differential effects on acquisition and
extinction processes.
In addition to effects on acquisition and extinction, these experiments
also provide an opportunity to assess the necessity of protein
synthesis for the retrieval of previously formed memories. In each of
our experiments, mice that received acquisition with saline showed
normal retrieval of acquisition learning during the first trial of
extinction in the presence of anisomycin. On the first trial of
reversal learning in the water maze, mice that received injections of
anisomycin showed retrieval similar to that of mice that received
injections of saline. Similarly, groups given anisomycin or saline did
not differ in performance on the initial extinction trials or in
overall rate of extinction, suggesting that the memories formed during
acquisition and extinction could be retrieved independent of protein synthesis.
This finding of protein synthesis-independent retrieval is consistent
with previous findings from spatial learning and contextual fear
conditioning (Bourtchouladze et al., 1998 ; Meiri and Rosenblum, 1998 ).
There are suggestions, however, that retrieval may induce a period of
reconsolidation that depends on protein synthesis (Nader et al., 2000 ).
Using a cued fear conditioning procedure, Nader et al. (2000) found
that injections of anisomycin into the amygdala after a retrieval test
decreased performance to the cue during a subsequent retrieval test. In
our experiments, post-trial injections of anisomycin and saline
resulted in similar decrements in performance, suggesting that the
decremental process that occurred during extinction was independent of
protein synthesis. It is important to note that our spatial-learning
and contextual fear conditioning tasks are sensitive to hippocampal
lesions, whereas the cued fear conditioning studied by Nader et al.
(2000) is not. However, it also should be noted that both contextual
and cued fear conditioning are sensitive to amygdala lesions, and our
systemic injections would affect the amygdala as well as the
hippocampus (e.g., Abel et al., 1997 ).
A recent paper by Berman and Dudai (2001) suggests that protein
synthesis may be important for extinction of conditioned taste aversions. They found that anisomycin injected into the insular cortex
blocked memories for extinction of taste aversion learning. One
explanation for the different pattern of results found by our
experiments and those by Berman and Dudai is that behavioral preparations that involve different brain structures might have unique
requirements for protein synthesis during extinction. It also is
possible that the requirement for protein synthesis depends on the
nature of the task (also see Flood et al., 1977 ). Another difference is
the amount of exposure to the stimulus that occurs during extinction.
In conditioned taste aversion, the animal generally samples a much
smaller amount of the flavor on the first extinction trial than it does
during acquisition trials. It is therefore possible that brief
exposures to stimuli as in the study by Berman and Dudai (2001) will
result in a dependence on protein synthesis, but longer exposures may
not. By holding exposure constant during acquisition and extinction, we
can conclude that the protein synthesis requirements of acquisition and
extinction differ in our tasks.
The major implication from these experiments is that the molecular
processes that underlie long-term behavioral changes following acquisition and extinction may be quite different. Behavioral experiments have shown that the changes in behavior that occur during
extinction do not reflect changes in the strength of the original
memory but instead reflect the superimposition of a depressive process
on that original association (for review, see Rescorla, 2001 ). Our
experiments suggest that this depressive process may have different
molecular properties from the process that underlies acquisition.
Experiments at the systems level also have suggested differences in the
neurobiology of acquisition and extinction. The ventromedial prefrontal
cortex, which does not appear to play a critical role in acquisition,
may be important for retaining memories of extinction after fear
conditioning (Quirk et al., 2000 ), although other findings question the
importance of this structure in extinction (Gewirtz et al., 1997 ).
On a molecular level, there is evidence that the NMDA receptor may be
important for extinction, suggesting that calcium may be a key second
messenger in this process (Falls et al., 1992 ; Baker and Azorlosa,
1996 ; Johnson et al., 2000 ). A molecular account of extinction
therefore may need to incorporate mechanisms that are calcium-dependent
but protein synthesis-independent. Candidate molecular processes that
might mediate long-term changes in neural function independent of gene
induction and new protein synthesis include alterations in the neuronal
cytoskeleton (Kennedy, 1997 ; Craven and Bredt, 1998 ; van Rossum and
Hanisch, 1999 ), autophosphorylation of protein kinases (Lisman, 1985 ),
and proteolysis (Lynch and Baudry, 1984 ). Cytoskeletal changes could
result in changes in the postsynaptic density, thereby altering the
subcellular localization of NMDA and AMPA receptors and changing the
morphology and efficiency of the synapse (Kennedy, 1997 ; Craven and
Bredt, 1998 ; van Rossum and Hanisch, 1999 ). Whatever the mechanism,
these experiments demonstrate that the requirement for protein
synthesis in the acquisition and extinction of spatial preferences and
context-evoked fear differs. Whereas memories for the acquisition of
spatial locations and context-shock associations failed to form in the presence of anisomycin, memories for extinction formed readily and
persisted across days. These findings suggest that the study of the
neurobiological basis of extinction may reveal novel cellular regulatory mechanisms involved in mediating long-lasting changes in
memory and behavior.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 23, 2001; revised May 22, 2001; accepted May 14, 2001.
This research was supported by a National Research Service Award
postdoctoral fellowship and a National Institutes of Health neuropsychopharmacology training grant to K.M.L. and by grants from the
Merck Foundation, National Institutes of Health, University of
Pennsylvania Research Foundation, and Whitehall Foundation to T.A. We
thank Mike Mullen for assistance with data collection and Michael
Nusbaum for comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Ted Abel, Department of Biology,
3740 Hamilton Walk, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail: abele{at}sas.upenn.edu.
 |
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