Abstract

The generalization of fear is adaptive in that it allows an animal to respond appropriately to novel threats that are not identical to previous experiences. In contrast, the overgeneralization of fear is maladaptive and is a hallmark of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a psychiatric illness that is characterized by chronic symptomatology and a higher incidence in women compared to men. Therefore, understanding the neural basis of fear generalization at remote time-points in female animals is of particular translational relevance. However, our understanding of the neurobiology of fear generalization is largely restricted to studies employing male mice and focusing on recent time-points (i.e., within 24–48 h following conditioning). To address these limitations, we examined how male and female mice generalize contextual fear at remote time intervals (i.e., 3 weeks after conditioning). In agreement with earlier studies of fear generalization at proximal time-points, we find that the test order of training and generalization contexts is a critical determinant of generalization and context discrimination, particularly for female mice. However, tactile elements that are present during fear conditioning are more salient for male mice. Our study highlights long-term sex differences in defensive behavior between male and female mice and may provide insight into sex differences in the processing and retrieval of remote fear memory observed in humans.

Highlights

  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating psychiatric illness that emerges following exposure to a life-threatening experience and is characterized by four symptom clusters: reexperiencing, avoidance, negative alterations in mood or cognition, and hyperarousal (APA, 2013)

  • Male and female mice were conditioned in the training context (Context A) and tested 21 days later to measure freezing in either Context A or the generalization context (Context B; Figure 2A)

  • Bonferroni post hoc comparisons following three-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) are indicated. (C) Discrimination index, calculated as % Freezing in Context A/(% Freezing in Context A + % Freezing in Context B). #p < 0.0001 for effect of test order in females, Bonferroni post hoc test following two-way ANOVA. ∗p < 0.05, #p < 0.0001

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Summary

Introduction

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating psychiatric illness that emerges following exposure to a life-threatening experience and is characterized by four symptom clusters: reexperiencing, avoidance, negative alterations in mood or cognition, and hyperarousal (APA, 2013). An important clinical manifestation of PTSD is the overgeneralization of fear or enhanced distress to environmental cues that resemble the life-threatening experience (APA, 2013). Patients who suffer from PTSD have greater difficulty in suppressing fear in a safe environment or in the presence of safety cues (Jovanovic et al, 2010). In a laboratory setting, individuals with PTSD have greater difficulty relative to control subjects in discerning perceptually similar rings from those paired with a shock (i.e., fear-conditioned rings; Kaczkurkin et al, 2017). PTSD is associated with broader generalization gradients (Grillon et al, 2009; Jovanovic et al, 2012; Homan et al, 2019; Starita et al, 2019).

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