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Hippocampal lesions impair contextual fear conditioning in two strains of mice.
125
Citations
19
References
1996
Year
NeuropsychologySynaptic TransmissionContextual Fear ConditioningAffective NeuroscienceSocial SciencesPsychologyDifferent StrainsMemoryCognitive NeurosciencePsychoneuroimmunologyCognitive SciencePsychiatryFear ConditioningSynaptic PlasticityNeurobiological MechanismHippocampal LesionsNeurobiological FactorNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryMedicine
Two different strains of mice, C57BL/6J and BALB/c, with hippocampal, cortical, or sham lesions, underwent contextual fear conditioning. In both strains, contextual fear, as measured by the freezing response, was significantly impaired in hippocampus-lesioned animals compared with sham control animals. Fear conditioning was not affected in the cortical-lesioned group. Moreover, there was a strain difference in fear conditioning: The C57BL/6J mice exhibited freezing more frequently than the BALB/c mice. Consistent with previous hippocampal lesion studies in rats, these results indicate that contextual fear conditioning in mice also requires the intact hippocampus. This study provides a basis for evaluating hippocampal synaptic mechanisms in relation to contextual fear conditioning in widely available gene knockout or transgenic mice.
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