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J Neurophysiol 78: 76-81, 1997;
0022-3077/97 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 78 No. 1 July 1997, pp. 76-81
Copyright ©1997 The American Physiological Society

Contextual Conditioned Fear Blocks the Induction But Not the Maintenance of Lateral Septal LTP in Behaving Mice

René Garcia, Rose Marie Vouimba, and Robert Jaffard

Laboratoire de Neurosciences Comportementales et Cognitives, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité de Recherche Associée 339, Université de Bordeaux I, 33405 Talence, France

Garcia, René, Rose Marie Vouimba, and Robert Jaffard. Contextual conditioned fear blocks the induction but not the maintenance of lateral septal LTP in behaving mice. J. Neurophysiol. 78: 76-81, 1997. High-frequency stimulation (HFS) of the fimbria induces long-term potentiation (LTP) in the lateral septum. This study was aimed at investigating the effect of contextual fear conditioning on septal LTP with the use of behaving C57 BL/6 mice as subjects. For the acquisition of contextual fear conditioning, animals were placed in a conditioning chamber, where they were subjected to footshocks (FSs, 0.6 mA); the following day (retention), animals were reexposed to the chamber. Animals from the first group received HFS in their home cages before being submitted to conditioning; animals from the second group were first submitted to conditioning before receiving HFS during reexposure to the conditioning chamber; animals from the third group were submitted to the same regimen as those from the second group, except that no FS was delivered in the conditioning chamber; and animals from the fourth group received FS in the conditioning chamber but were maintained in their home cages the day after for LTP induction. Before conditioning, animals from the first group, placed in a familiar context (home cage), displayed an LTP of the N3 wave of septal field potential. After conditioning, reexposure of these animals to the conditioning chamber produced a transient decrease in the amplitude of N3 but did not interfere with the duration of maintenance of LTP. Conversely, in animals from the second group, when HFS was applied during reexposure to the conditioning chamber the induction of LTP was totally blocked. However, mice from the two other groups (3rd and 4th) displayed normal levels of LTP. Taken together with previous findings, these data suggest that contextual conditioned fear may interfere with certain forms of learning via blockade of hippocampal-septal LTP.




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