Cell Reports (Apr 2024)

Maladaptation of dentate gyrus mossy cells mediates contextual discrimination deficit after traumatic stress

  • Minseok Jeong,
  • Jin-Hyeok Jang,
  • Seo-Jin Oh,
  • Jeongrak Park,
  • Junseop Lee,
  • Sehyeon Hwang,
  • Yong-Seok Oh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 4
p. 114000

Abstract

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Summary: Fear overgeneralization is a maladaptive response to traumatic stress that is associated with the inability to discriminate between threat and safety contexts, a hallmark feature of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, the neural mechanisms underlying this deficit remain unclear. Here, we show that traumatic stress exposure impairs contextual discrimination between threat and safety contexts in the learned helplessness (LH) model. Mossy cells (MCs) in the dorsal hippocampus are suppressed in response to traumatic stress. Bidirectional manipulation of MC activity in the LH model reveals that MC inhibition is causally linked to impaired contextual discrimination. Mechanistically, MC inhibition increases the number of active granule cells in a given context, significantly overlapping context-specific ensembles. Our study demonstrates that maladaptive inhibition of MCs after traumatic stress is a substantial mechanism underlying fear overgeneralization with contextual discrimination deficit, suggesting a potential therapeutic target for cognitive symptoms of PTSD.

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