Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether age would disrupt fear retention and extinction memory in rats pre-exposed to maternal separation and isolation stress; these rats are called MS rats. MS stress was induced by exposing rat pups into maternal separation followed by isolation stress from peer groups (MS) daily/6h during stress hyporesponsive period, while controls rats that were undisturbed during this period are called NMS rats. 5, 8, 15 and 52weeks later, these animals were exposed to classical fear conditioning test by pairing auditory stimulus (conditioned stimulus, CS+) with electric footshock. 24h later, conditioned freezing response to CS+ was measured during fear retention, extinction and extinction recall trials. The normal ageing per se did not affect the formation of fear memory, retention and fear extinction memory. MS stress, on the other hand, disrupted fear memory at young adulthood age exhibiting increased freezing response to CS+ during retention test and reduced during fear extinction memory test when compared to NMS groups. On the other hand, rats at adolescence age exhibited reduced freezing during fear retention and enhanced freezing response to CS+ during extinction recall test. However, MS-induced changes in freezing response during fear retention and extinction tests were not seen in adulthood and 1-year-old age groups. These data demonstrate the young adulthood age is highly vulnerable to fear memory and extinction processes. The differences in freezing response to CS+ during fear conditioning from adolescence to old age, thus, appear to be related to the maturation of the limbic circuit.

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