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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 2, 2003, 23(13):5740-5749
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Metabolic Mapping of Mouse Brain Activity after Extinction of a Conditioned Emotional Response
Douglas Barrett,
Jason Shumake,
Dirk Jones, and
F. Gonzalez-Lima
Institute for Neuroscience and Department of Psychology, University of
Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
Metabolic mapping with fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), a radiolabeled glucose
analog, was used to assess regional activity changes in the mouse brain that
result from extinction of a conditioned emotional response (CER). In the
extinction group, Pavlovian tonefoot shock conditioning, followed by
repeated tone-alone presentations, resulted in the reduction of the CER
(freezing behavior). A second group underwent CER acquisition alone
(nonextinction group), and a third group showed no CER after pseudorandom
training. Then mice were injected with FDG, and tone-evoked brain activity was
mapped. In the auditory system, increased activity resulted from the
associative effects of acquisition training. Effects common to extinction and
nonextinction groups, presumably reflecting the tonefoot shock
association independently of CER expression, were found in the medial
geniculate, hippocampus, and subiculum. In the extinction group, a major
finding was the elevated activity in prefrontal cortex regions. In addition,
brainbehavior correlations between FDG uptake and freezing behavior
confirmed that subjects with higher prefrontal activity were more successful
at inhibiting the CER. Interregional activity correlations showed extensive
functional coupling across large-scale networks in the extinction group. The
increased activity of the prefrontal cortex and its negative interactions with
other regions within the extinction group suggest a functional network
inhibiting the CER composed of prefrontal cortex, medial thalamus, auditory,
and hippocampal regions. This is the first time that such a functional network
resulting from Pavlovian extinction has been demonstrated, and it supports
Pavlov's original hypothesis of extinction as the formation of cortical
inhibitory circuits, rather than unlearning or reversal of the acquisition
process.
Key words: metabolic mapping; extinction; prefrontal cortex; Pavlovian conditioning; fluorodeoxyglucose; learning and memory
Received Mar. 6, 2003;
revised Apr. 18, 2003;
accepted Apr. 23, 2003.
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