Artigos
Hypothalamic sites responding to predator threats – the role of the dorsal premammillary nucleus in unconditioned and conditioned antipredatory defensive behavior
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URL: http://www.alessandrofazolo.com/pbupl/public/ejn_6392.pdf
Autor(res): A. F. CEZARIO, E. R. RIBEIRO-BARBOSA, M. V. C. BALDO AND N. S. CANTERAS
Instituição: Department of Anatomy, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of São Paulo, Av. Lineu Prestes, 2415, CEP 05508-900 São Paulo, SP, Brazil
Enviado em: 24/8/2008 21:15:33
Acessos: 9
Referência:
Eur J Neurosci (2008) Volume 28: 1003 - 1015.
Resumo:
In this study we provide a comprehensive analysis of the hypothalamic activation pattern during exposure to a live predator or an
environment previously associated with a predator. Our results support the view that hypothalamic processing of the actual and the
contextual predatory threats share the same circuit, in which the dorsal premammillary nucleus (PMd) plays a pivotal role in
amplifying this processing. To further understand the role of the PMd in the circuit organizing antipredatory defensive behaviors, we
studied rats with cytotoxic PMd lesions during cat exposure and examined the pattern of behavioral responses as well as how PMd
lesions affect the neuronal activation of the systems engaged in predator detection, in contextual memory formation and in defensive
behavioral responses. Next, we investigated how pharmacological blockade of the PMd interferes with the conditioned behavioral
responses to a context previously associated with a predator, and how this blockade affects the activation pattern of periaqueductal
gray (PAG) sites likely to organize the conditioned behavioral responses to the predatory context. Behavioral observations indicate
that the PMd interferes with both unconditioned and conditioned antipredatory defensive behavior. Moreover, we have shown that the
PMd influences the activation of its major projecting targets, i.e. the ventral part of the anteromedial thalamic nucleus which is likely to
influence mnemonic processing, and PAG sites involved in the expression of antipredatory unconditioned and conditioned behavioral
responses. Of particular relevance, this work provides evidence to elucidate the basic organization of the neural circuits integrating
unconditioned and contextual conditioned responses to predatory threats.
Palavras-chave:
AMYGDALA, FEAR CONDITIONING, HYPOTHALAMUS, INNATE FEAR, PERIAQUEDUCTAL GRAY, RAT
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