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Keeping Synapses Clean May Hold Key To Fear-Conditioning.


Health/Medical Writers

BELMONT, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 7, 2004

McLean Hospital researchers have made a discovery that could help explain one of the most powerful paradigms in modern psychology, Pavlovian fear conditioning. Alterations in fear conditioning are thought to play a role in such common psychiatric illnesses as post-traumatic stress disorder post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mental disorder that follows an occurrence of extreme psychological stress, such as that encountered in war or resulting from violence, childhood abuse, sexual abuse, or serious accident. , generalized anxiety disorder Generalized Anxiety Disorder Definition

Generalized anxiety disorder is a condition characterized by "free floating" anxiety or apprehension not linked to a specific cause or situation.
 and panic disorder. The discovery by Vadim Bolshakov, PhD, and his colleagues, reported in the Jan. 8 Neuron, could lead to a better understanding of these debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing
adj.
Causing a loss of strength or energy.


Debilitating
Weakening, or reducing the strength of.

Mentioned in: Stress Reduction
 illnesses.

As readers of introductory psychology texts know, animals easily learn to fear a harmless stimulus, such as a tone, if that stimulus is paired with a painful one, such as a foot shock. For this fear conditioning to take root in the brain, neurons located in the almond-shaped amygdala amygdala /amyg·da·la/ (ah-mig´dah-lah)
1. almond.

2. an almond-shaped structure.

3. corpus amygdaloideum.


a·myg·da·la
n. pl.
 must become extraordinarily sensitized sensitized /sen·si·tized/ (sen´si-tizd) rendered sensitive.

sensitized

rendered sensitive.


sensitized cells
see sensitization (2).
 to the tone-carrying stimulus--so sensitive that they will continue to fire even in the absence of an auditory stimulus. Yet each neuron in the amygdala is capable of receiving many, even thousands, of inputs. How are neurons able to exhibit such sensitivity, known as long-term potentiation (LTP), to a single input amid such a plethora of signals?

The answer, it appears, is by cleaning up their synapses. For LTP to occur, a presynaptic presynaptic /pre·syn·ap·tic/ (-si-nap´tik) situated or occurring proximal to a synapse.

pre·syn·ap·tic
adj.
Relating to the area on the proximal side of a synaptic gap.
 neuron must release the chemical glutamate in a continuous manner. Normally, glutamate is removed from the synaptic cleft by housekeeping proteins, known as glutamate transporters, in the postsynaptic postsynaptic /post·sy·nap·tic/ (-si-nap´tik) distal to or occurring beyond a synapse.

post·syn·ap·tic
adj.
Situated behind or occurring after a synapse.
 neuron. Suspecting that this glutamate-removal system might play a role in maintaining input specificity, Bolshakov, director of McLean Hospital's Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory, and his colleagues blocked the glutamate transporter in neurons of the amygdala. They then monitored the cells' ability to differentiate between LTP-inducing signals from two auditory inputs, one from the thalamus thalamus (thăl`əməs), mass of nerve cells centrally located in the brain just below the cerebrum and resembling a large egg in size and shape.  and the other from the cortex. The cells' ability to distinguish between inputs was lost. The cells became sensitized to both inputs, even though LTP had only been induced in one.

Bolshakov and his colleagues believe that spillover of excess glutamate may be responsible. "We found that if the glutamate transporter is not functioning efficiently, glutamate escapes from the stimulated synapse and activates the unstimulated one."

The experiments, conducted in fly amygdala neurons, could have relevance for humans. "We know that the amygdala is involved in emotional learning in humans," said Bolshakov. "Post-traumatic stress disorder is a form of amygdala-based learning. A person comes to associate insignificant biological stimuli with painful memories."

Although it is not clear whether glutamate transporters play a role in post-traumatic stress disorder, glutamate release and uptake is thought to be impaired in a variety of psychiatric illnesses, from Alzheimer's disease to schizophrenia.

"Glutamate uptake mechanisms are regulated by different molecules. They could be down-regulated under different pathological conditions," said Bolshakov. "It would be important to investigate in detail such regulatory pathways using different neurobiological and genetic approaches."

McLean Hospital is the largest psychiatric affiliate of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  and maintains the largest research program of any private psychiatric hospital in the U.S.
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