Enduring deficits in contextual and auditory fear conditioning after adolescent, not adult, social instability stress in male rats

Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2011 Jan;95(1):46-56. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2010.10.007. Epub 2010 Oct 21.

Abstract

Adolescence is a time of developmental changes and reorganization in the brain and stress systems, thus, adolescents may be more vulnerable than adults to the effects of chronic mild stressors. Most studies, however, have not directly compared stress experienced in adolescence to the same stress experience in adulthood. In the present study, adolescent (n=46) and adult (n=48) male rats underwent 16 days of social instability stress (daily 1h isolation and change of cage partners) or were non-stress controls. Rats were then tested on the strength of acquired contextual and cued fear conditioning, as well as extinction learning, beginning either the day after the stress procedure or 3 weeks later. No difference was found among the groups during the Training Phase of conditioning. Irrespective of the time between the social stress experience and fear conditioning, rats stressed in adolescence had decreased context and cue memory, and cue generalization compared to control rats, as measured by the percentage of time spent freezing in tests. Social instability stress in adulthood had no effect on any measure of fear conditioning. The results support the hypothesis that adolescence is a time of heightened vulnerability to stressors.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Age Factors
  • Analysis of Variance
  • Animals
  • Association Learning / physiology*
  • Conditioning, Psychological / physiology*
  • Electroshock
  • Fear / physiology*
  • Freezing Reaction, Cataleptic / physiology
  • Male
  • Random Allocation
  • Rats
  • Rats, Long-Evans
  • Stress, Psychological / physiopathology*