Volume 16, Number 9,
Issue of May 1, 1996
pp. 3097-3103
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Somatostatin in the Pontine Reticular Formation Modulates Fear
Potentiation of the Acoustic Startle Response: An Anatomical,
Electrophysiological, and Behavioral Study
Received Dec. 11, 1995; revised Feb. 5, 1996; accepted Feb. 9, 1996.
Markus Fendt,
Michael Koch, and
Hans-Ulrich Schnitzler
Tierphysiologie, Universität Tübingen, D-72076
Tübingen, Germany
The amplitude of the acoustic startle response (ASR) in rats is
increased in the presence of a cue that has previously been paired with
an aversive stimulus such as a footshock. This phenomenon is called
fear-potentiated startle and is a model to study the neuronal and
neurochemical mechanisms of the acquisition and expression of fear. The
present study investigated the role in fear-potentiated startle of
somatostatin in the caudal pontine reticular nucleus (PnC) by a
combination of anatomical, electrophysiological, and behavioral
methods. The PnC is an essential part of the primary startle circuit
and is also the recipient of modulatory influences. First, we showed
that the central gray (CG), which is involved in fear
conditioning, is the main source of somatostatinergic input to the PnC.
In the second experiment, we iontophoretically applied the somatostatin
receptor agonist sandostatin on PnC neurons and extracellularly
recorded the activity of PnC neurons. Sandostatin had no effect on
tone-evoked or spontaneous activity, but markedly attenuated the
increase of neuronal activity seen after the administration of
glutamate. In our third experiment, we injected different doses of
sandostatin into the PnC of awake rats. Sandostatin blocked fear
potentiation of the ASR but had no effect on the baseline ASR
amplitude. The present study indicates that the somatostatinergic
projection from the CG to the PnC is important for the modulation of
fear-potentiated startle. We present a possible neural circuitry for
the expression of fear-potentiated startle based on these data and
previous findings.
Key words:
acoustic startle response;
amygdala;
anxiety;
caudal pontine reticular nucleus;
central gray;
fear;
neuropeptides;
periaqueductal gray;
sandostatin;
SMS 201-995;
somatostatin;
rat