Tj. Shors, Acute stress and re-exposure to the stressful context suppress spontaneousunit activity in the basolateral amygdala via NMDA receptor activation, NEUROREPORT, 10(13), 1999, pp. 2811-2815
EXPOSURE to an acute stressor of intermittent tail-shocks enhances acquisit
ion of the classically conditioned eyeblink response and the enhancement is
dependent on NMDA receptor activation in the basolateral nucleus of the am
ygdala. In the present study, multiple units (spikes/s) were recorded from
the basolateral amygdala in response to the stressor of intermittent tail-s
hocks (thirty, 1 mA, 1s, 1/min) and upon re-exposure to the context in whic
h the stress was administered. Exposure to the stressor suppressed multiple
unit activity in the basolateral/lateral amygdala (67% of baseline) which,
in some cases, persisted for 48 h after stressor cessation. Re-exposure to
the stressful context reactivated the suppression in unit activity (69% of
baseline). In a second experiment, it was determined that the stress-induc
ed suppression of neuronal activity was prevented by NMDA receptor antagoni
sm during stressor exposure. It is proposed that the stress-induced suppres
sion of background unit activity enhances the neural representation of envi
ronmental cues by enhancing their signal/background noise ratio and thereby
facilitates the formation of associations between those cues. (C) 1999 Lip
pincott Williams & Wilkins.