Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10158236 Neuropharmacology 2018 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Here we show that deletion of Y2Rs increased recall, but delayed extinction of contextual fear. Interestingly, spatial memory in the Barnes maze was enhanced during early and late testing, suggesting that Y2Rs suppress learning by hippocampal and extra-hippocampal mechanisms. To demonstrate sufficiency of hippocampal Y2Rs we performed viral vector-mediated, locally restricted re-expression of Y2Rs in the hippocampus of Y2KO mice. This treatment reduced spatial memory to the level of wildtype mice only during early, but not late recall. Furthermore, contextual fear was reduced, while induction of fear extinction appeared earlier. Our results suggest that hippocampal Y2R signaling inhibits learning in a time- and content-specific way, resulting in an early reduction of spatial memory and in a specific suppression of fear, by reducing fear recall and promoting fear extinction. We thus propose that reduction of hippocampal excitability through pre-synaptic Y2Rs may control the integration of contextual information into developing memories.
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