TY - JOUR
T1 - Sex Differences In Avoidance Extinction After Contextual Fear Conditioning
T2 - Anxioescapic Behavior In Female Rats
AU - Shanazz, Khadijah
AU - Dixon-Melvin, Rachael
AU - Nalloor, Rebecca
AU - Thumar, Riya
AU - Vazdarjanova, Almira I.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by funding from the Department of Veterans Affairs Merit.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 IBRO
PY - 2022/8/10
Y1 - 2022/8/10
N2 - Fear memories are important for survival and are implicated in the etiology of fear disorders such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Fear memories are well studied pre-clinically and sex differences in rodent fear expression have been reported: females tend to freeze less than males. Whether this is a difference in fear learning or expression is debated. We aimed to differentiate between these possibilities with a task that allowed female rats to express fear memory by moving, rather than freezing. We assessed fear extinction after contextual fear conditioning in the isolated Shock Arm of a Y-maze in female and male rats by either placing them back in the isolated Shock Arm (Fear Extinction in the Shock Context) or allowing them to move freely in the Y-maze during extinction training and enter/avoid the Shock Arm (Avoidance Extinction). We confirmed that female rats freeze less than males during fear extinction in both settings. During Avoidance Extinction, however, both sexes had similar avoidance of the Shock Context, showing comparable fear memory and extinction. Additionally, female rats made more entries into the non-shock arms. Thus, female and male rats have similar fear learning but females express it with an active motor response. Furthermore, female rats also exhibited an active motor response under other anxiogenic conditions (Elevated Plus Maze) and had higher reactivity (Acoustic Startle Response) but not when fear-eliciting stimuli were present: cat hair and foot-shock. In summary, female rats have an active motor response to anxiogenic stimuli which we termed ‘Anxioescapic’ behavior strategy.
AB - Fear memories are important for survival and are implicated in the etiology of fear disorders such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Fear memories are well studied pre-clinically and sex differences in rodent fear expression have been reported: females tend to freeze less than males. Whether this is a difference in fear learning or expression is debated. We aimed to differentiate between these possibilities with a task that allowed female rats to express fear memory by moving, rather than freezing. We assessed fear extinction after contextual fear conditioning in the isolated Shock Arm of a Y-maze in female and male rats by either placing them back in the isolated Shock Arm (Fear Extinction in the Shock Context) or allowing them to move freely in the Y-maze during extinction training and enter/avoid the Shock Arm (Avoidance Extinction). We confirmed that female rats freeze less than males during fear extinction in both settings. During Avoidance Extinction, however, both sexes had similar avoidance of the Shock Context, showing comparable fear memory and extinction. Additionally, female rats made more entries into the non-shock arms. Thus, female and male rats have similar fear learning but females express it with an active motor response. Furthermore, female rats also exhibited an active motor response under other anxiogenic conditions (Elevated Plus Maze) and had higher reactivity (Acoustic Startle Response) but not when fear-eliciting stimuli were present: cat hair and foot-shock. In summary, female rats have an active motor response to anxiogenic stimuli which we termed ‘Anxioescapic’ behavior strategy.
KW - PTSD
KW - anxiety
KW - avoidance extinction
KW - fear extinction
KW - rats
KW - sex differences
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2022.06.031
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2022.06.031
M3 - Article
C2 - 35764190
AN - SCOPUS:85133779810
SN - 0306-4522
VL - 497
SP - 146
EP - 156
JO - Neuroscience
JF - Neuroscience
ER -