AI Article Synopsis

  • The early environment significantly impacts fetal brain development and can affect emotional learning in adulthood, particularly through maternal stress.
  • In maternally stressed mice, while innate fear and fear memory acquisition remained unchanged, there was a notable impairment in fear memory consolidation and long-term potentiation (LTP) at amygdala synapses.
  • Reduced glucocorticoid receptor expression in these mice suggests a weakening of glucocorticoid signaling, but administration of glucocorticoids restored memory processes, indicating that prenatal stress has lasting effects on the amygdala’s response to stress hormones.

Article Abstract

The environment in early life elicits profound effects on fetal brain development that can extend into adulthood. However, the long-lasting impact of maternal stress on emotional learning remains largely unknown. Here, we focus on amygdala-related learning processes in maternally stressed mice. In these mice, fear memory consolidation and certain related signaling cascades were significantly impaired, though innate fear, fear memory acquisition, and synaptic NMDA receptor expression in the amygdala were unaltered. In accordance with these findings, maintenance of long-term potentiation (LTP) at amygdala synapses, but not its induction, was significantly impaired in the maternally stressed animals. Interestingly, amygdala glucocorticoid receptor expression was reduced in the maternally stressed mice, and administration of glucocorticoids (GCs) immediately after fear conditioning and LTP induction restored memory consolidation and LTP maintenance, respectively, suggesting that a weakening of GC signaling was responsible for the observed impairment. Furthermore, microinfusion of a membrane-impermeable form of GC (BSA-conjugated GC) into the amygdala mimicked the restorative effects of GC, indicating that a nongenomic activity of GC mediates the restorative effect. Together, these findings suggest that prenatal stress induces long-term dysregulation of nongenomic GC action in the amygdala of adult offspring, resulting in the impairment of fear memory consolidation. Since modulation of amygdala activity is known to alter the consolidation of emotionally influenced memories allocated in other brain regions, the nongenomic action of GC on the amygdala shown herein may also participate in the amygdala-dependent modulation of memory consolidation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6703196PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4692-10.2011DOI Listing

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