TY - JOUR
T1 - Dynamic processing of taste aversion extinction in the brain
AU - Mickley, G Andrew
AU - Kenmuir, Cynthia L
AU - McMullen, Colleen A
AU - Yocom, Anna M
AU - Valentine, Elizabeth L
AU - Dengler-Crish, Christine M
AU - Weber, Bettina
AU - Wellman, Justin A
AU - Remmers-Roeber, Dawn R
PY - 2004/7/30
Y1 - 2004/7/30
N2 - While substantial advances have been made in discovering how the brain learns and remembers, less is known about how the brain discards information, reorganizes information, or both. These topics are not only relevant to normal brain functioning but also speak to pathologies in which painful memories do not wane but are evoked time and again (e.g., post-traumatic stress disorder; PTSD). Here, we measured brain activity (as indicated by the regional expression of c-Fos protein) in rats during acquisition and throughout extinction of a conditioned taste aversion (CTA). We compared that brain activity with animals that had intact CTA memories or those that experienced an explicitly unpaired (EU) conditioned stimulus (CS; saccharin, SAC) and unconditioned stimulus (US; lithium chloride, LiCl). The data show a dynamic and nonuniform pattern of c-Fos protein expression in brain nuclei known to mediate gustation and CTAs. In particular, brainstem nuclei (e.g., nucleus of the solitary tract; NTS) and the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) are active early as CTAs are formed and as extinction of the learned response begins. Later in the extinction process, the BLA reduces c-Fos expression relative to nonextinguished controls. Finally, as almost full reacceptance of the taste is achieved, the gustatory neocortex (GNC) expresses enhanced levels of c-Fos protein. Thus, extinction of a CTA is not represented by a simple reversal of the c-Fos activity evoked by CTA conditioning. Rather, the data demonstrate that extinction of conditioned responses is a dynamic process in which the activity levels of particular nuclei along the brain's taste pathway change depending on the extent to which the conditioned response has been extinguished.
AB - While substantial advances have been made in discovering how the brain learns and remembers, less is known about how the brain discards information, reorganizes information, or both. These topics are not only relevant to normal brain functioning but also speak to pathologies in which painful memories do not wane but are evoked time and again (e.g., post-traumatic stress disorder; PTSD). Here, we measured brain activity (as indicated by the regional expression of c-Fos protein) in rats during acquisition and throughout extinction of a conditioned taste aversion (CTA). We compared that brain activity with animals that had intact CTA memories or those that experienced an explicitly unpaired (EU) conditioned stimulus (CS; saccharin, SAC) and unconditioned stimulus (US; lithium chloride, LiCl). The data show a dynamic and nonuniform pattern of c-Fos protein expression in brain nuclei known to mediate gustation and CTAs. In particular, brainstem nuclei (e.g., nucleus of the solitary tract; NTS) and the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) are active early as CTAs are formed and as extinction of the learned response begins. Later in the extinction process, the BLA reduces c-Fos expression relative to nonextinguished controls. Finally, as almost full reacceptance of the taste is achieved, the gustatory neocortex (GNC) expresses enhanced levels of c-Fos protein. Thus, extinction of a CTA is not represented by a simple reversal of the c-Fos activity evoked by CTA conditioning. Rather, the data demonstrate that extinction of conditioned responses is a dynamic process in which the activity levels of particular nuclei along the brain's taste pathway change depending on the extent to which the conditioned response has been extinguished.
KW - Analysis of Variance
KW - Animals
KW - Avoidance Learning/physiology
KW - Behavior, Animal
KW - Brain/anatomy & histology
KW - Cell Count/methods
KW - Conditioning, Classical/physiology
KW - Extinction, Psychological/physiology
KW - Gene Expression Regulation/physiology
KW - Immunohistochemistry/methods
KW - Lithium Chloride/metabolism
KW - Male
KW - Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos/metabolism
KW - Rats
KW - Rats, Sprague-Dawley
KW - Saccharin/metabolism
KW - Taste/physiology
U2 - 10.1016/j.brainres.2004.04.071
DO - 10.1016/j.brainres.2004.04.071
M3 - Article
C2 - 15234255
SN - 0006-8993
VL - 1016
SP - 79
EP - 89
JO - Brain Research
JF - Brain Research
IS - 1
ER -