- Author:
Yan TAO
1
;
Cheng-Yun CAI
1
;
Jia-Yun XIAN
1
;
Xiao-Lin KOU
1
;
Yu-Hui LIN
1
;
Cheng QIN
1
;
Hai-Yin WU
1
;
Lei CHANG
1
;
Chun-Xia LUO
1
;
Dong-Ya ZHU
1
;
Dong-Ya ZHU
2
;
Dong-Ya ZHU
3
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: Amygdala; Fear extinction retrieval; Infralimbic cortex; Medial prefrontal cortex; Neural circuit; Paraventricular thalamus; Post-traumatic stress disorder
- From: Neuroscience Bulletin 2021;37(2):229-241
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
- Abstract: The paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus (PVT), which serves as a hub, receives dense projections from the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and projects to the lateral division of central amygdala (CeL). The infralimbic (IL) cortex plays a crucial role in encoding and recalling fear extinction memory. Here, we found that neurons in the PVT and IL were strongly activated during fear extinction retrieval. Silencing PVT neurons inhibited extinction retrieval at recent time point (24 h after extinction), while activating them promoted extinction retrieval at remote time point (7 d after extinction), suggesting a critical role of the PVT in extinction retrieval. In the mPFC-PVT circuit, projections from IL rather than prelimbic cortex to the PVT were dominant, and disrupting the IL-PVT projection suppressed extinction retrieval. Moreover, the axons of PVT neurons preferentially projected to the CeL. Silencing the PVT-CeL circuit also suppressed extinction retrieval. Together, our findings reveal a new neural circuit for fear extinction retrieval outside the classical IL-amygdala circuit.