International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Fear Conditioning by Proxy: The Role of High Affinity Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors

  • Zinovia Stavroula Chalkea,
  • Danai Papavranoussi-Daponte,
  • Alexia Polissidis,
  • Marinos Kampisioulis,
  • Marina Pagaki-Skaliora,
  • Eleni Konsolaki,
  • Irini Skaliora

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015143
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 20
p. 15143

Abstract

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Observational fear-learning studies in genetically modified animals enable the investigation of the mechanisms underlying the social transmission of fear-related information. Here, we used a three-day protocol to examine fear conditioning by proxy (FCbP) in wild-type mice (C57BL/6J) and mice lacking the β2-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR). Male animals of both genotypes were exposed to a previously fear-conditioned (FC) cage mate during the presentation of the conditioned stimulus (CS, tone). On the following day, observer (FCbP) mice were tested for fear reactions to the tone: none of the β2-KO mice froze to the stimulus, while 30% of the wild-type mice expressed significant freezing. An investigation of the possible factors that predicted the fear response revealed that only wild-type mice that exhibited enhanced and more flexible social interaction with the FC cage mate during tone presentations (Day 2) expressed fear toward the CS (Day-3). Our results indicate that (i) FCbP is possible in mice; (ii) the social transmission of fear depends on the interaction pattern between animals during the FCbP session and (iii) β2-KO mice display a more rigid interaction pattern compared to wild-type mice and are unable to acquire such information. These data suggest that β2-nAChRs influence observational fear learning indirectly through their effect on social behaviour.

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