Published October 24, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A thalamic-hippocampal CA1 signal for contextual fear memory suppression, extinction, and discrimination

Description

The adaptive regulation of fear memories is a crucial neural function that prevents inappropriate fear expression. Fear memories can be acquired through contextual fear conditioning (CFC) which relies on the hippocampus. The thalamic nucleus reuniens (NR) is necessary to extinguish contextual fear and innervates hippocampal CA1. However, the role of the NR-CA1 pathway in contextual fear is unknown. We developed a head-restrained virtual reality CFC paradigm, and demonstrate that mice can acquire and extinguish context-dependent fear responses. We found that inhibiting the NR-CA1 pathway following CFC lengthens the duration of fearful freezing epochs, increases fear generalization, and delays fear extinction. Using in vivo imaging, we recorded NR-axons innervating CA1 and found that NR-axons become tuned to fearful freezing following CFC. We conclude that the NR-CA1 pathway actively suppresses fear by disrupting contextual fear memory retrieval in CA1 during fearful freezing behavior, a process that also reduces fear generalization and accelerates extinction.

Data availability

The data generated in this study have been deposited in the github database under accession code https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8393380. Raw imaging data are available under restricted access due to their substantial size on the multi-terabyte scale. Access can be obtained by contacting the corresponding author. The processed imaging and behavioral data are available at the previous link. The relevant data generated in this study are provided in the Supplementary Information/Source Data file. Source data are provided in this paper.

The original code used to create figures from preprocessed data is available on GitHub at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8393380.

Files

Thalamic-hippocampal-CA1-signal-for-contextual-fear-memory-suppression-extinction-and-discrimination.pdf

Files (7.2 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:300adc2916da4b7dabac9b433896c40c
90.3 kB Download
Supplementary information files
md5:0c01cce00e0fb86573c1ced4fd47f5b2
2.3 MB Preview Download
Article
md5:6fa8b09c52796791522577295d511038
4.8 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-42429-6
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9288

Funding

The Whitehall Foundation
The Searle Scholars Program
The Sloan Foundation
University of Chicago
Institute for Neuroscience start-up funds
National Institutes of Health
New Innovator grant
National Institute on Drug Abuse
T32 training grant

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Neurobiology
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Neuroscience Institute