1. Developmental emergence of persistent memory for contextual and auditory fear in mice
- Author
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Maithe Arruda-Carvalho, Agarsh Satheesh, Arely Cruz-Sanchez, Rojina Samifanni, Unza Mumtaz, and Mudi Zhao
- Subjects
Male ,Memory, Long-Term ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Infralimbic cortex ,Context (language use) ,Contextual fear ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Memory ,medicine ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Fear conditioning ,Postnatal day ,Prefrontal cortex ,Recall ,05 social sciences ,Fear ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Time line ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mental Recall ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The ability to generate memories that persist throughout a lifetime (that is, memory persistence) emerges in early development across species. Although it has been shown that persistent fear memories emerge between late infancy and adolescence in mice, it is unclear exactly when this transition takes place, and whether two major fear conditioning tasks, contextual and auditory fear, share the same time line of developmental onset. Here, we compared the ontogeny of remote contextual and auditory fear in C57BL/6J mice across early life. Mice at postnatal day (P)15, 21, 25, 28, and 30 underwent either contextual or auditory fear training and were tested for fear retrieval 1 or 30 d later. We found that mice displayed 30-d memory for context– and tone–fear starting at P25. We did not find sex differences in the ontogeny of either type of fear memory. Furthermore, 30-d contextual fear retrieval led to an increase in the number of c-Fos positive cells in the prelimbic region of the prefrontal cortex only at an age in which the contextual fear memory was successfully retrieved. These data delineate a precise time line for the emergence of persistent contextual and auditory fear memories in mice and suggest that the prelimbic cortex is only recruited for remote memory recall upon the onset of memory persistence.
- Published
- 2021
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