Theta-paced stimulation of the thalamic nucleus reuniens entrains mPFC-HPC oscillations and facilitates the acquisition of extinction memories
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The nucleus reuniens (RE) is a midline thalamic nucleus interconnecting the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and the hippocampus (HPC), structures known to be involved in aversive memory processes. Recent work indicates that the RE plays a critical role in the acquisition and retrieval of fear extinction memories. Functional inactivation of the RE impairs both mPFC-HPC coherence and extinction memory. Here we examine whether imposing theta activity on the RE entrains oscillations in the mPFC and HPC and facilitates extinction learning.
Methods
To deliver theta-paced (8 Hz) optogenetic stimulation, we expressed an excitatory opsin, (channelrhodopsin; AAV9-CaMKIIahChR2(H134R)-mCherry) or control virus (AAV9-CaMKIIa-mCherry) in the RE in male and female rats. A single optic fiber targeting the RE was implanted during the same surgery. After recovery, animals underwent auditory fear conditioning, extinction training, and an extinction retrieval test, each separated by 24-h. During extinction training, conditioned stimuli (CS) presentations were paired with 8-Hz sinusoidal optostimulation (473 nM, 10 mW) of the RE. In another experiment, we recorded local field potentials (LFPs) from the mPFC and dorsal HPC during using these behavioral procedures.
Results
Theta-paced stimulation of the RE during extinction training significantly decreased freezing behavior compared to the control group. Notably, the reduction in conditioned behavior was evident during the subsequent stimulation-free retrieval test. This reveals that RE stimulation during extinction not only suppresses conditioned fear responses acutely, but also facilitates the acquisition of long-term extinction memories. Theta-paced RE stimulation markedly enhanced both neural activity and entrained theta oscillations in the mPFC and dHPC.
Conclusion
This work suggests that the RE oscillatory activity is critical for the acquisition of extinction memories through the modulation of hippocampal-prefrontal network dynamics. In the future, RE theta-paced stimulation can be an important therapeutic tool by strengthening extinction memories.