Nature Research Journals
You are receiving this press release because you have registered to do so at the Nature Research press site. In registering to receive these press releases, you have agreed to the terms and conditions
Embargo
London
Monday 05 September 2016 16:00 (BST)
/ New York
Monday 05 September 2016 11:00 (EDT)
Tokyo
Tuesday 06 September 2016 00:00 (JST)
/ Sydney
Tuesday 06 September 2016 01:00 (AEST)
Wire services’ stories must always carry the embargo time at the head of each item, and may not be sent out more than 24 hours before that time.
Solely for the purpose of soliciting informed comment on Nature Research papers, you may show relevant parts of this document, and the papers to which it refers, to independent specialists – but you must ensure in advance that they understand and accept Nature Research’s embargo conditions.
Press releases
This press release is copyright Macmillan Publishers Limited. Its use is granted only for journalists and news media receiving it directly from Nature Research. Full terms and conditions can be found here.
The best contacts for stories will always be the authors, but the editor who handled a paper may be available for comment if an author is unobtainable. Please get in touch with Nature Research's press contacts as listed below with any editorial enquiry.
We take great care not to hype the papers mentioned on our press releases. If you ever consider that a story has been hyped, please do not hesitate to contact us at , citing the specific example.

Nature Neuroscience
[3] A new pathway for fear (N&V)
A new neural pathway for fear is described in a study in mice published online this week in Nature Neuroscience. The pathway is required for animals to retrieve previously formed fear memories.
The ability to learn associations between environmental cues and adverse outcomes is paramount to survival in any species. The amygdala, an almond-shaped structure deep within the brain, has a primary role in forming these types of fear memories. It has long been appreciated that the pathway from environmental cue to the amygdala is through the sensory areas of the neocortex, the same regions that enable an organism to decipher sounds, tastes, smells, and sights.
Yang Yang and colleagues now show that there is also a pathway in the brain operating in the opposite direction, from the amygdala back to the sensory neocortex. They find that changes in this pathway during learning are critical for remembering fearful stimuli and that inhibiting this pathway reduces a mouse’s fear response. To demonstrate this, the authors used a suite of tools and techniques that allow them to examine the microscopic structure of the pathway and to manipulate it in mice. These results have important implications for disorders that are associated with dysfunction of the amygdala, such as anxiety disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder.
As Bo Li writes in an accompanying News & Views article: “Undoubtedly ... the use of ever-advancing neuroscience technologies … holds promise for elucidating the neural mechanisms of fear regulation and dysregulation in health and disease, respectively.”
Article details
DOI: 10.1038/nn.4370
Corresponding Author:
Yang Yang
Chinese Academy of Sciences,Shanghai,China
Email: l: +86 21 5492 1781
Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends):