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Recent theories suggest that reduced serotonin transporter (5-HTT) function, which increases serotonin (5-HT) levels at the synapse, enhances neural plasticity and affects sensitivity to environmental cues. This may promote learning about emotionally relevant events. However, the boundaries that define such emotional learning remain to be established. This was investigated using 5-HTT knockout (5-HTTKO) mice which provide a model of long-term elevated 5-HT transmission and are associated with increased anxiety. Compared to wild-type controls, 5-HTTKO mice were faster to discriminate between an auditory cue that predicted footshock (CS+) and a cue predicting no footshock (CS-). Notably, this enhanced discrimination performance was driven not by faster learning that the CS+ predicted footshock, but rather by faster learning that the CS- cue signals the absence of footshock and thus provides temporary relief from fear/anxiety. Similarly, 5-HTTKO mice were also faster to reduce their fear of the CS+ cue during subsequent extinction. These findings are consistent with facilitated inhibitory learning that predicts the absence of potential threats in 5-HTTKO mice. However, 5-HTTKO mice also exhibited increased generalisation of fear learning about ambiguous aversive cues in a novel context, different from the training context. Thus, 5-HTTKO mice can exhibit both more and less fear compared to wild-type controls. Taken together, our results support the idea that loss of 5-HTT function, and corresponding increases in synaptic 5-HT availability, may facilitate learning by priming of aversive memories. This both facilitates inhibitory learning for fear memories but also enhances generalisation of fear.

Original publication

DOI

10.1111/gbb.70016

Type

Journal

Genes Brain Behav

Publication Date

02/2025

Volume

24

Keywords

Pavlovian conditioning, anxiety, fear, inhibitory learning, safety, Animals, Fear, Serotonin Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins, Mice, Male, Mice, Knockout, Cues, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Extinction, Psychological, Conditioning, Classical, Anxiety