Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Impairs Fear Extinction and Network Excitability in the Infralimbic Cortex.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Catherine E Ubri, Anthony M Farrugia, Akiva S Cohen
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Abstract

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of morbidity and disability, with mild TBI (concussions) representing over 80% of cases. Although often considered benign, mild TBI is associated with persistent neuropsychiatric conditions, including post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression. A hallmark of these conditions is impaired fear extinction (FE), the process by which learned fear responses are inhibited in safe contexts. This dysfunction contributes to maladaptive fear expression and is linked to altered neurocircuitry, particularly in the infralimbic cortex (IL), a key region in FE. Despite extensive evidence of impaired FE in patients with mild TBI and animal models, the specific mechanisms underlying this deficit remain poorly understood. This study aimed to address this gap by combining cued-FE behavior, local field potential recordings, and whole-cell patch-clamp techniques to investigate how mild TBI affects IL network activity and excitability in a mouse model of TBI. Our results demonstrate that mild lateral fluid percussion injury significantly impairs FE memory, as evidenced by an elevated cued-fear response during extinction testing 10 days post-injury. Field potential recordings revealed decreased activation of the IL network in both layers II/III and V, which was consistent with the observed behavioral deficits. Further analysis of synaptic physiology revealed an imbalance in excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission (E/I imbalance) in the IL, characterized by reduced excitatory input and enhanced inhibitory input to neurons in both layers. Moreover, intrinsic excitability was altered in IL neurons after mild TBI. This study provides novel insights into how mild TBI disrupts the neurocircuitry underlying FE, specifically by suppressing IL excitability. These results highlight the importance of understanding the mechanistic disruptions in IL activity for developing therapeutic strategies to address fear-based disorders in patients with mild TBI.

轻度创伤性脑损伤对边缘下皮层恐惧消退和网络兴奋性的影响。
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)是发病和致残的主要原因,其中轻度脑损伤(脑震荡)占80%以上。虽然通常被认为是良性的,但轻度创伤性脑损伤与持续性神经精神疾病有关,包括创伤后应激障碍、焦虑和抑郁。这些情况的一个特征是恐惧消退受损(FE),即习得性恐惧反应在安全环境中被抑制的过程。这种功能障碍导致了不适应的恐惧表达,并与神经回路的改变有关,特别是在边缘下皮层(IL),这是FE的一个关键区域。尽管在轻度TBI患者和动物模型中有大量证据表明FE受损,但这种缺陷的具体机制仍然知之甚少。本研究旨在通过结合线索- fe行为、局部场电位记录和全细胞膜片钳技术来研究轻度脑损伤如何影响脑损伤小鼠模型中的IL网络活动和兴奋性,从而解决这一空白。我们的研究结果表明,轻度外侧液体撞击损伤显著损害了FE记忆,在损伤后10天的消退测试中,线索-恐惧反应升高证明了这一点。场电位记录显示,II/III和V层的IL网络激活减少,这与观察到的行为缺陷一致。进一步的突触生理学分析揭示了IL中兴奋性和抑制性神经传递(E/I失衡)的不平衡,其特征是两层神经元的兴奋性输入减少而抑制性输入增强。此外,轻度TBI后IL神经元的固有兴奋性发生改变。这项研究为轻度创伤性脑损伤如何破坏FE的神经回路,特别是通过抑制IL兴奋性提供了新的见解。这些结果强调了理解IL活性的机制破坏对于制定治疗策略以解决轻度TBI患者基于恐惧的疾病的重要性。
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来源期刊
Journal of neurotrauma
Journal of neurotrauma 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
7.10%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Neurotrauma is the flagship, peer-reviewed publication for reporting on the latest advances in both the clinical and laboratory investigation of traumatic brain and spinal cord injury. The Journal focuses on the basic pathobiology of injury to the central nervous system, while considering preclinical and clinical trials targeted at improving both the early management and long-term care and recovery of traumatically injured patients. This is the essential journal publishing cutting-edge basic and translational research in traumatically injured human and animal studies, with emphasis on neurodegenerative disease research linked to CNS trauma.
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