Functional inactivation of the lateral and basal nuclei of the amygdala by muscimol infusion prevents fear conditioning to an explicit conditioned stimulus and to contextual stimuli. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The GABAa agonist, muscimol (0.5 microgram in 0.5 microliter saline), or vehicle was infused into the lateral and basal amygdala nuclei prior to fear conditioning or testing in rats. Rats given muscimol before conditioning and saline before testing showed much less freezing to the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the context than did controls given saline before training and testing. Rats given saline before training and muscimol prior to testing also showed low levels of freezing to the CS and the context. In follow-up procedures, rats with acquisition initially blocked by pretraining muscimol infusions froze in a manner similar to that of controls when retrained and retested with saline infusions. Rats trained with saline but tested with muscimol presumably became conditioned but could express the learning. When retested with saline, they froze in the same manner as controls. Thus, activity in the lateral and basal amygdala appears to play an essential role in the acquisition and expression of fear conditioning.

publication date

  • August 1, 1997

Research

keywords

  • Amygdala
  • Association Learning
  • Conditioning, Classical
  • Fear
  • GABA Agonists
  • Muscimol
  • Receptors, GABA-A

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0030795996

PubMed ID

  • 9267646

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 111

issue

  • 4