During the project, an integrated experimental and analytical framework was established to explore how fear memories are formed, altered, and disrupted across whole-brain neural circuits. The work brought together behavioural tasks, genetic and viral tools, brain-wide imaging, and computational analysis to better understand fear extinction and fear discrimination.
A central achievement was the development and validation of mArc tagging system, which allows the tagging of different memory-related neuronal populations within the same brain. By combining an Arc-based genetic strategy with an Arc-RAM viral approach, the system avoids complex breeding schemes and offers greater experimental flexibility. In vivo experiments confirmed reliable tagging of neurons activated during fear learning and recall, making mArc a powerful tool to follow memory dynamics over time.
The project also optimised behavioural paradigms relevant to PTSD, including contextual fear conditioning for fear extinction, and pattern separation for discrimination. These paradigms were paired with whole-brain tissue clearing and immunolabelling, enabling single-cell-resolution visualisation of memory-related activity. The large datasets generated by high-resolution imaging required the implementation of a scalable computational pipeline such as the SMARTTr workflow, which supports consistent whole-brain registration and quantitative comparisons across individuals and conditions.
In parallel, pharmacological interventions were tested. Prophylactic ketamine enhanced early fear discrimination in a sex-dependent manner, suggesting a possible strategy to reduce maladaptive fear generalisation. Brain-wide analyses of treated animals are currently ongoing.
Overall, the project delivered new tools, data, and concepts to study fear memories as dynamic, brain-wide processes, laying the groundwork for future research on PTSD-like behaviours and targeted interventions.