Males and females have different brain connectivity to process the same memory.
Social & Behavioural Sciences
The Andero Lab discovered sex differences in neural projections of fear memory processing in mice and humans. It was unexplored in the field of fear memory whether functional neuronal connectivity between two brain areas was necessary for one sex but not the other. Here, we show that chemogenetic silencing of centromedial (CeM)–Tac2 fibers in the lateral posterior BNST (BNSTpl) decreased fear memory consolidation in male mice but not females. Optogenetic excitation of CeM-Tac2 fibers in the BNSTpl exhibited enhanced inhibitory postsynaptic currents in males compared to females. In vivo calcium imaging analysis revealed a sex-dimorphic fear memory engram in the BNSTpl. Furthermore, in humans, the single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the Tac2 receptor (rs2765) (TAC3R) decreased CeM-BNST connectivity in a fear task, impaired fear memory consolidation, and increased the expression of the TAC3R mRNA in AA-carrier men but not in women. These sex differences in critical neuronal circuits underlying fear memory formation may be relevant to human neuropsychiatric disorders with fear memory alterations such as posttraumatic stress disorder.
The novel idea in brain functioning uncovered by the Andero Lab showing sex differences in neural projections for memory formation in both mice and humans. Figure created with Biorender.
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