AI Article Synopsis

  • Exaggerated avoidance behavior significantly reduces the quality of life for individuals with anxiety disorders, and while animal studies have shed light on how such behaviors develop, there is less understanding of how they can be extinguished.
  • Research in mice shows that learning about a safe environment is more effective in overcoming avoidance than simply repeating the avoided response without negative consequences, with this process being context-dependent and influenced by cannabinoid CB1 receptors.
  • The endocannabinoid reuptake inhibitor AM404 enhances safety learning and reduces relapse of avoidance behavior by facilitating neural activity in the hippocampus, whereas diazepam impairs this learning process, indicating the importance of specific neural pathways in managing anxiety-related behaviors.

Article Abstract

The development of exaggerated avoidance behavior is largely responsible for the decreased quality of life in patients suffering from anxiety disorders. Studies using animal models have contributed to the understanding of the neural mechanisms underlying the acquisition of avoidance responses. However, much less is known about its extinction. Here we provide evidence in mice that learning about the safety of an environment (i.e., safety learning) rather than repeated execution of the avoided response in absence of negative consequences (i.e., response extinction) allowed the animals to overcome their avoidance behavior in a step-down avoidance task. This process was context-dependent and could be blocked by pharmacological (3 mg/kg, s.c.; SR141716) or genetic (lack of cannabinoid CB1 receptors in neurons expressing dopamine D1 receptors) inactivation of CB1 receptors. In turn, the endocannabinoid reuptake inhibitor AM404 (3 mg/kg, i.p.) facilitated safety learning in a CB1-dependent manner and attenuated the relapse of avoidance behavior 28 days after conditioning. Safety learning crucially depended on endocannabinoid signaling at level of the hippocampus, since intrahippocampal SR141716 treatment impaired, whereas AM404 facilitated safety learning. Other than AM404, treatment with diazepam (1 mg/kg, i.p.) impaired safety learning. Drug effects on behavior were directly mirrored by drug effects on evoked activity propagation through the hippocampal trisynaptic circuit in brain slices: As revealed by voltage-sensitive dye imaging, diazepam impaired whereas AM404 facilitated activity propagation to CA1 in a CB1-dependent manner. In line with this, systemic AM404 enhanced safety learning-induced expression of Egr1 at level of CA1. Together, our data render it likely that AM404 promotes safety learning by enhancing information flow through the trisynaptic circuit to CA1.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2017.02.002DOI Listing

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