Rats respond to aversive emotional arousal of human handlers with the activation of the basolateral and central amygdala

Author:

Kaźmierowska Anna M.12ORCID,Kostecki Mateusz2,Szczepanik Michał123ORCID,Nikolaev Tomasz2ORCID,Hamed Adam4ORCID,Michałowski Jarosław M.5ORCID,Wypych Marek1ORCID,Marchewka Artur1ORCID,Knapska Ewelina2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Brain Imaging, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw 02-093, Poland

2. Laboratory of Emotions Neurobiology, BRAINCITY–Centre of Excellence for Neural Plasticity and Brain Disorders, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw 02-093, Poland

3. Institute of Neuroscience and Medicine, Brain & Behavior, Research Center Jülich, Jülich 52428, Germany

4. Laboratory of Spatial Memory, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw 02-093, Poland

5. Laboratory of Affective Neuroscience in Poznan, University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Poznań 61-719, Poland

Abstract

Reading danger signals may save an animal’s life, and learning about threats from others allows avoiding first-hand aversive and often fatal experiences. Fear expressed by other individuals, including those belonging to other species, may indicate the presence of a threat in the environment and is an important social cue. Humans and other animals respond to conspecifics’ fear with increased activity of the amygdala, the brain structure crucial for detecting threats and mounting an appropriate response to them. It is unclear, however, whether the cross-species transmission of threat information involves similar mechanisms, e.g., whether animals respond to the aversively induced emotional arousal of humans with activation of fear-processing circuits in the brain. Here, we report that when rats interact with a human caregiver who had recently undergone fear conditioning, they show risk assessment behavior and enhanced amygdala activation. The amygdala response involves its two major parts, the basolateral and central, which detect a threat and orchestrate defensive responses. Further, we show that humans who learn about a threat by observing another aversively aroused human, similar to rats, activate the basolateral and centromedial parts of the amygdala. Our results demonstrate that rats detect the emotional arousal of recently aversively stimulated caregivers and suggest that cross-species social transmission of threat information may involve similar neural circuits in the amygdala as the within-species transmission.

Funder

Narodowe Centrum Nauki

EC | ERC | HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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