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The Nucleus Accumbens Core is Necessary to Scale Fear to Degree of Threat

Madelyn H. Ray, Alyssa Russ, Rachel A. Walker, Michael A. McDannald

2020Journal of Neuroscience48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fear is adaptive when the level of the response rapidly scales to degree of threat. Using a discrimination procedure consisting of danger, uncertainty, and safety cues, we have found rapid fear scaling (within 2 s of cue presentation) in male rats. Here, we examined a possible role for the nucleus accumbens core (NAcc) in the acquisition and expression of fear scaling. In experiment 1, male Long-Evans rats received bilateral sham or neurotoxic NAcc lesions, recovered, and underwent fear discrimination. NAcc-lesioned rats were generally impaired in scaling fear to degree of threat, and specifically impaired in rapid uncertainty-safety discrimination. In experiment 2, male Long-Evans rats received NAcc transduction with halorhodopsin (Halo) or a control fluorophore. After fear scaling was established, the NAcc was illuminated during cue or control periods. NAcc-Halo rats receiving cue illumination were specifically impaired in rapid uncertainty-safety discrimination. The results reveal a general role for the NAcc in scaling fear to degree of threat, and a specific role in rapid discrimination of uncertain threat and safety.

Topics & Concepts

Nucleus accumbensPsychologyNeuroscienceCentral nervous systemReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research