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Article: Juvenile neurogenesis makes essential contributions to adult brain structure and plays a sex-dependent role in fear memories

TitleJuvenile neurogenesis makes essential contributions to adult brain structure and plays a sex-dependent role in fear memories
Authors
KeywordsAdult neurogenesis
Fear conditioning
Hippocampus
Juvenile neurogenesis
Learning and memory
Olfactory bulb
Postnatal neurogenesis
Sex difference
Issue Date2012
Citation
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 2012, n. FEBRUARY 2012, p. 1-17 How to Cite?
AbstractPostnatal neurogenesis (PNN) contributes neurons to olfactory bulb (OB) and dentate gyrus (DG) throughout juvenile development, but the quantitative amount, temporal dynamics and functional roles of this contribution have not been defined. By using transgenic mouse models for cell lineage tracing and conditional cell ablation, we found that juvenile neurogenesis gradually increased the total number of granule neurons by approximately 40% in OB, and by 25% in DG, between 2 weeks and 2 months of age, and that total numbers remained stable thereafter. These findings indicate that the overwhelming majority of net postnatal neuronal addition in these regions occurs during the juvenile period and that adult neurogenesis contributes primarily to replacement of granule cells in both regions. Behavioral analysis in our conditional cell ablation mouse model showed that complete loss of PNN throughout both the juvenile and young adult period produced a specific set of sex-dependent cognitive changes. We observed normal hippocampus-independent delay fear conditioning, but excessive generalization of fear to a novel auditory stimulus, which is consistent with a role for PNN in psychopathology. Standard contextual fear conditioning was intact, however, pre-exposure dependent contextual fear was impaired suggesting a specific role for PNN in incidental contextual learning. Contextual discrimination between two highly similar contexts was enhanced; suggesting either enhanced contextual pattern separation or impaired temporal integration. We also observed a reduced reliance on olfactory cues, consistent with a role for OB PNN in the efficient processing of olfactory information. Thus, juvenile neurogenesis adds substantively to the total numbers of granule neurons in OB and DG during periods of critical juvenile behavioral development, including weaning, early social interactions and sexual maturation, and plays a sex-dependent role in fear memories. © 2012 Cushman, Maldonado, Kwon, Garcia, Fan, Imura, Sofroniew and Fanselow.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/365699
ISSN
2023 Impact Factor: 2.6
2023 SCImago Journal Rankings: 0.949

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorCushman, Jesse D.-
dc.contributor.authorMaldonado, Jose-
dc.contributor.authorKwon, Eunice E.-
dc.contributor.authorDenise Garcia, A.-
dc.contributor.authorFan, Guoping-
dc.contributor.authorImura, Tetsuya-
dc.contributor.authorSofroniew, Michael V.-
dc.contributor.authorFanselow, Michael S.-
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-05T09:46:55Z-
dc.date.available2025-11-05T09:46:55Z-
dc.date.issued2012-
dc.identifier.citationFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 2012, n. FEBRUARY 2012, p. 1-17-
dc.identifier.issn1662-5153-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/365699-
dc.description.abstractPostnatal neurogenesis (PNN) contributes neurons to olfactory bulb (OB) and dentate gyrus (DG) throughout juvenile development, but the quantitative amount, temporal dynamics and functional roles of this contribution have not been defined. By using transgenic mouse models for cell lineage tracing and conditional cell ablation, we found that juvenile neurogenesis gradually increased the total number of granule neurons by approximately 40% in OB, and by 25% in DG, between 2 weeks and 2 months of age, and that total numbers remained stable thereafter. These findings indicate that the overwhelming majority of net postnatal neuronal addition in these regions occurs during the juvenile period and that adult neurogenesis contributes primarily to replacement of granule cells in both regions. Behavioral analysis in our conditional cell ablation mouse model showed that complete loss of PNN throughout both the juvenile and young adult period produced a specific set of sex-dependent cognitive changes. We observed normal hippocampus-independent delay fear conditioning, but excessive generalization of fear to a novel auditory stimulus, which is consistent with a role for PNN in psychopathology. Standard contextual fear conditioning was intact, however, pre-exposure dependent contextual fear was impaired suggesting a specific role for PNN in incidental contextual learning. Contextual discrimination between two highly similar contexts was enhanced; suggesting either enhanced contextual pattern separation or impaired temporal integration. We also observed a reduced reliance on olfactory cues, consistent with a role for OB PNN in the efficient processing of olfactory information. Thus, juvenile neurogenesis adds substantively to the total numbers of granule neurons in OB and DG during periods of critical juvenile behavioral development, including weaning, early social interactions and sexual maturation, and plays a sex-dependent role in fear memories. © 2012 Cushman, Maldonado, Kwon, Garcia, Fan, Imura, Sofroniew and Fanselow.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience-
dc.subjectAdult neurogenesis-
dc.subjectFear conditioning-
dc.subjectHippocampus-
dc.subjectJuvenile neurogenesis-
dc.subjectLearning and memory-
dc.subjectOlfactory bulb-
dc.subjectPostnatal neurogenesis-
dc.subjectSex difference-
dc.titleJuvenile neurogenesis makes essential contributions to adult brain structure and plays a sex-dependent role in fear memories-
dc.typeArticle-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.3389/fnbeh.2012.00003-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-84856973515-
dc.identifier.issueFEBRUARY 2012-
dc.identifier.spage1-
dc.identifier.epage17-

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