Publication | Open Access
Cerebellar nuclei neurons projecting to the lateral parabrachial nucleus modulate classical fear conditioning
19
Citations
50
References
2023
Year
Multiple brain regions are engaged in classical fear conditioning. Despite evidence for cerebellar involvement in fear conditioning, the mechanisms by which cerebellar outputs modulate fear learning and memory remain unclear. We identify a population of deep cerebellar nucleus (DCN) neurons with monosynaptic glutamatergic projections to the lateral parabrachial nucleus (lPBN) (DCN<sup>→lPBN</sup> neurons) in mice. While optogenetic suppression of DCN<sup>→lPBN</sup> neurons impairs auditory fear memory, activation of DCN<sup>→lPBN</sup> neurons elicits freezing behavior only after auditory fear conditioning. Moreover, auditory fear conditioning potentiates DCN-lPBN synapses, and subsequently, auditory cue activates lPBN neurons after fear conditioning. Furthermore, DCN<sup>→lPBN</sup> neuron activation can replace the auditory cue but not footshock in fear conditioning. These findings demonstrate that cerebellar nuclei modulate auditory fear conditioning via transmitting conditioned stimuli signals to the lPBN. Collectively, our findings suggest that the DCN-lPBN circuit is a part of neuronal substrates within interconnected brain regions underscoring auditory fear memory.
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