Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6258928 Behavioural Brain Research 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The role of the GABAB receptor in regulating conditioned anxiety behaviour is unclear.•We assessed the effects of GABAB receptor ligands on fear conditioning in BALB/c mice.•GS39783 failed to alter the acquisition, recall or extinction of freezing behaviour.•CGP52432 also did not alter the freezing response.•These findings suggest limitations to the potential role of GABAB receptor active drugs as anxiolytics.

The GABAB receptor has been well characterised as a substrate of unconditioned anxiety behaviour. Indeed, the anxiolytic effects of positive modulators of the GABAB receptor have been demonstrated across a range of behavioural tests of innate anxiety, whereas GABAB receptor deficient mice have an elevated anxiety phenotype. However, the role of the GABAB receptor in regulating conditioned anxiety behaviour; an important facet of the preclinical study of anxiety disorders such as post-traumatic stress disorder is less well understood. In vitro data suggests that the GABAB receptor plays an important role in regulating the neural circuitry that underpins conditioned fear learning and extinction, but whether these effects translate into alterations in conditioned anxiety behaviour has not been widely investigated. This represents a crucial deficit in the preclinical characterisation of these drugs as putative anxiolytic agents. Using the highly anxious mouse strain, BALB/c, and an auditory fear conditioning protocol, we sought to characterise the GABAB receptor positive modulator GS39783 and GABAB receptor antagonist CGP52432, two compounds not previously evaluated for their effects on conditioned fear. Neither GS39783 nor CGP52432 altered freezing behaviour irrespective of whether drugs were administered before the acquisition, recall or extinction training sessions. These findings suggest limitations to the potential role of GABAB receptor active drugs as clinical agents in the treatment of anxiety.

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