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Serotonergic modulation of the BNST–CeA pathway reveals sex differences in fear learning by Rebecca Ravenelle & Jinah Lee & Carolina Fernandes-Henriques & Jia Liu & Allyson K. Friedman & Ekaterina Likhtik & Nesha S. Burghardt instant download

  • SKU: EBN-239131136
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Instant download (eBook) Serotonergic modulation of the BNST–CeA pathway reveals sex differences in fear learning after payment.
Authors:Rebecca Ravenelle & Jinah Lee & Carolina Fernandes-Henriques & Jia Liu & Allyson K. Friedman & Ekaterina Likhtik & Nesha S. Burghardt
Pages:updating ...
Year:2025
Publisher:x
Language:english
File Size:10.6 MB
Format:pdf
Categories: Ebooks

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Serotonergic modulation of the BNST–CeA pathway reveals sex differences in fear learning by Rebecca Ravenelle & Jinah Lee & Carolina Fernandes-Henriques & Jia Liu & Allyson K. Friedman & Ekaterina Likhtik & Nesha S. Burghardt instant download

Nature Neuroscience, doi:10.1038/s41593-025-02025-x

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is characterized by intense fear memory formation and is diagnosed more often in women than men. Here we show that increasing serotonin pharmacologically before auditory fear conditioning promoted memory recall in female and male mice, and that females were more sensitive to this efect. Optogenetic stimulation of raphe terminals in the anterior dorsal bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (adBNST) during fear conditioning increased c-Fos expression in the BNST and central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA) and enhanced fear memory recall through activation of 5-HT2C receptors in the adBNST in females only. Likewise, serotonin stimulation during fear learning enhanced adBNST–CeA high gamma (90–140 Hz) synchrony and adBNST-to-CeA communication in high gamma during fear memory recall in females only. These fndings suggest that sex diferences in the raphe–BNST–CeA pathway may contribute to the higher risk of PTSD in women.

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