Infusion of etoposide in the CA1 disrupts hippocampal immediate early gene expression and hippocampus-dependent learning

Tight regulation of immediate early gene (IEG) expression is important for synaptic plasticity, learning, and memory. Recent work has suggested that DNA double strand breaks (DSBs) may have an adaptive role in post-mitotic cells to induce IEG expression. Physiological activity in cultured neurons as well as behavioral training leads to increased DSBs and subsequent IEG expression. Additionally, infusion of etoposide—a common cancer treatment that induces DSBs—impairs trace fear memory. Here, we assessed the effects of hippocampal infusion of 60 ng of etoposide on IEG expression, learning, and memory in 3–4 month-old C57Bl/6J mice. Etoposide altered expression of the immediate early genes cFos and Arc in the hippocampus and impaired hippocampus-dependent contextual fear memory. These data add to the growing evidence that DSBs play an important role in IEG expression, learning, and memory, opening avenues for developing novel treatment strategies for memory-related disorders.

www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Yet, etoposide's penetration past the blood brain barrier is poor (< 3%) 15 , and toxicity is seen in cell cultures at doses around 10 µg/mL 16 . As such, direct infusions into the central nervous system are used in patients being treated for brain tumors. Cerebral spinal fluid levels were around 3 µg/mL in patients 2 h after receiving 0.5 mg intraventricular infusions 17 ; while headaches were the main side effects reported, there was no assessment of learning or memory. In mice, direct infusion of 0.1 µg/µL (but not 1 ng/µL) of etoposide in the prelimbic area impairs long-term fear memory and alters the timeline of cFos, Arc, Npas4, and Cyr61 RNA expression 18 . More research is needed to identify the extent and specificity of DSBs in learning and memory as well as characterize the molecular changes induced by lower doses. Namely, testing the effects of etoposide in brain regions known to be important for learning and memory-such as the hippocampus-is an important next-step in understanding the role of DSBs in the learning and memory process, as well as testing lower doses similar to those observed in the clinic. Further clarifying possible mechanisms, like disruption to IEG expression, is also needed for a better understanding of this system.
Here, we used 60 ng of etoposide to induce DSBs selectively in the CA1 region of the hippocampus during fear acquisition. We hypothesized that CA1 infusions of etoposide would interfere with hippocampal IEG expression and impair hippocampus-dependent long-term contextual (but not hippocampus-independent cued) fear memory. Etoposide increased γH2Ax in the CA1, but not in other regions of the hippocampus. Etoposide also impaired cFos expression throughout the hippocampus and decreased long-term contextual-dependent freezing. These data point to a nuanced disruption of intra-hippocampal signaling by etoposide and provide more direct causal evidence that DSBs are involved in hippocampus-dependent learning and memory via regulation of IEGs.

Results
Fear conditioning and hippocampal injection of etoposide increases γH2Ax foci in the CA1. Using male C57Bl/6J (WT) mice, we bilaterally implanted cannula targeting the CA1 region of the hippocampus. Body weights were used to track health and recovery of mice throughout all experiments (Table 1).
To determine the effects of etoposide on hippocampal IEGs and hippocampus-dependent learning and memory, we bilaterally infused 0.3 µL of etoposide (0.1 µg/µL) or saline into the CA1 region of the hippocampus in male WT mice. Two hours later, mice were euthanized (behaviorally naïve, n = 4-5/treatment) or trained in a fear conditioning paradigm and immediately euthanized (n = 4/treatment).
We first assessed the effects of etoposide infusions on γH2Ax formation by immunofluorescence in the CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus (DG) regions of the hippocampus (Fig. 1a). Mice trained in fear conditioning had significantly more γH2Ax foci in the CA1 than behaviorally naïve animals (p = 0.001; Fig. 1b). Additionally, etoposide infusions increased the number of γH2Ax foci in the CA1 region (p < 0.001; Fig. 1b). Sidak's post hoc testing indicated that mice that received fear conditioning and etoposide infusions had significantly more γH2Ax than fear conditioned, saline-infused mice (p < 0.05). Representative images of γH2Ax in the CA1 can be seen in Fig. 1c.
Similarly, γH2Ax foci in the CA3 were significantly increased in animals that underwent fear conditioning (p < 0.001; Fig. 1d). There was no difference between saline-and etoposide-infused animals in the CA3 region (p = 0.995), though we found a significant condition by treatment interaction (p = 0.038; Fig. 1d), where etoposide increased γH2Ax in the behaviorally naïve mice but decreased it in the fear conditioned mice. Representative images of γH2Ax in the CA3 can be seen in Fig. 1e.
Analysis of γH2Ax foci in the DG also revealed a significant effect of behavioral condition (p < 0.001; Fig. 1f), as well as a significant condition by treatment interaction (p = 0.005). Sidak's post hoc testing indicated that fear conditioned, etoposide-infused mice had less γH2Ax than conditioned-matched, saline-infused mice (p < 0.05). There was no main effect of treatment (p = 0.140). Representative images of γH2Ax in the DG can be seen in Fig. 1g. These region-and condition-dependent change in γH2Ax focus formation suggests that CA1-targeted infusion of etoposide disrupt DSBs in the hippocampus at baseline and during a learning event.
To confirm that our infusions were not causing cell death, we assessed Fluoro-Jade C staining in the hippocampus. There was no visible sign of Fluoro-Jade C staining in any hippocampal regions, indicating that neither saline nor etoposide infusions caused cell death (Supplemental Fig. 1a,b).

Etoposide disrupts timeline of Arc and cFos expression in the hippocampus. Induction of DSBs
with etoposide in the prelimbic area of mice interfere with the timeline of IEG expression, increasing expression 5 h after stimulation 18 . Thus, we looked at two IEGs-Arc and cFos-using immunohistochemistry immediately following fear training (2 h after infusion, n = 4/treatment) or 5 h after training (7 h after infusion, n = 7-8/ treatment; Fig. 2a) in male WT mice. Additionally, we analzyed cFos in behaviorally naïve animals that received infusions of saline or etoposide (n = 4-5/treatment). A representative image of the cannula location and hip- Table 1. Body weights before cannula implantation ("Pre-Surgery") and at the end of the study ("Post-Infusion") in male and female mice. Data presented as averages ± SEMs.  Fig. 2b. Representative images of cFos and Arc staining in the CA1, CA3, and DG can be seen in Supplementary Fig. 2a-f. In the CA1, mice that underwent fear conditioning had significantly more cFos + cells than behaviorally naïve mice (p < 0.001), and mice euthanized immediately after fear conditioning had more than mice euthanized 5 h later (p = 0.001; Fig. 2c). We also found a significant time post-training by behavior interaction (p < 0.001). Sidak's post-hoc comparison indicated that fear conditioned, saline-infused mice euthanized 5 h post-training had significantly fewer cFos + cells compared to the immediately-euthanized, fear conditioned saline group (p < 0.0001). However, this was blunted in the fear-conditioned etoposide-infused groups: mice euthanized 5 h post-training were not different than mice euthanized immediately (p = 0.2607; Fig. 2c).
Similarly, fear conditioning significantly increased the amount of cFos in the CA3 (p < 0.001; Fig. 2d). We also found a time post-training by behavior interaction in the CA3 (p < 0.001). Sidak's post-hoc comparison showed that both saline-and etoposide-infused animals euthanized immediately after fear conditioning had more cFos + cells than mice euthanized 5 h after fear conditioning (p < 0.0001, p = 0.0037, respectively; Fig. 2d).
There were also more cFos + cells in the DG in fear conditioned animals than behavioral naïve animals (p < 0.001; Fig. 2e). We found significant time by treatment (p = 0.041), time by behavior condition (p = 0.034), and treatment by time by behavior condition (p = 0.011) interactions, as well as a trend towards a time by treatment interaction (p = 0.052). Sidak's post hoc test indicated that only the fear conditioned, saline-infused groups showed a drop in the number of cFos + cells (p < 0.0001); this pattern was absent in the fear conditioned, etoposide-infused groups (p = 0.7132; Fig. 2e).
We next analyzed the number of Arc + cells in the CA1, CA3, and DG in mice that underwent fear conditioning with saline or etoposide infusions. In the CA1, we found a significant effect of time (p = 0.030), though in the opposite direction compared to the number of cFos + cells (Fig. 2f). Both saline-and etoposide-infused mice euthanized 5 h after training had more Arc + cells than the immediate groups. In the CA3, the number of Arc + cells was affected by treatment (p = 0.023), but not time (p = 0.414), with the etoposide-infused groups showing more Arc + cells than the saline-infused groups (Fig. 2g). Lastly, the number of Arc + cells in the DG was affected by time (p < 0.001), treatment (p = 0.006), and a time x treatment interaction (p = 0.006; Fig. 2h). www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Sidak's post-hoc testing indicated that the number of Arc + cells dropped over time in the saline-infused groups (p < 0.001) but not the etoposide-infused groups (p = 0.539). Overall, the etoposide groups had fewer Arc + cells (Fig. 2h).
To assess if communication between hippocampal regions was disrupted by etoposide, we ran correlations of the number of cFos + cells between the CA1, CA3, and DG. We found significant positive correlations for both saline-and etoposide-treated animals between the CA1 and DG (p < 0.0001; Fig. 2I), the CA1 and CA3 (p < 0.0001; Fig. 2j), and the CA3 and DG (p < 0.0001; Fig. 2k). Similar analysis of intra-hippocampal Arc signal did not reveal any significant correlations between regions in either treatment group (Supplemental Fig. 3a-c).
To assess if there was a relationship between cFos and Arc, we correlated signals in each region. There was no relationship between the number of cFos + and Arc + cells in the CA1 or CA3 regions. However, there was a positive correlation between the number of immunopositive cFos and Arc cells in the DG in saline-infused mice only (p < 0.001; Fig. 2l); there was no correlation in etoposide-infused mice (p = 0.772). We also correlated the number of γH2Ax foci with the number of cFos + cells in each region. There were no significant correlations in the CA3 or DG, though we found significant positive correlations in the CA1 of both saline-(p = 0.0176) and etoposide-infused (p = 0.0239) mice that underwent fear conditioning (Fig. 2m). There was no significant correlation in the CA1 of behaviorally naïve animals.
Altogether, these data suggest that hippocampal infusion of etoposide blunts cFos expression, and blunts Arc in the DG but increases it in the CA3 region.
Hippocampal injection of etoposide impairs long-term contextual, but not cued, fear memory in both males and females. Based on the observed molecular changes in the hippocampus, we subsequently assessed long-term hippocampus-dependent and -independent memory. Our previous work indicated that systemic injections of etoposide affected males and females differently 13 , thus we assessed long-term memory in both males and females here (n = 13-15/sex/treatment). All animals went through the same infusion and fear training timeline and were subsequently tested for contextual (hippocampus-dependent) and cued (hippocampus-independent) memory at 24 h and contextual fear memory at 2 weeks (Fig. 3a). No differences were detected in body weight based on drug treatment (p = 0.828). Males weighed more than females throughout the study (p < 0.001; Table 1).
There were no differences in performance during fear training based on treatment. All animals showed similar activity levels at baseline (p = 0.653; Fig. 3b), motion in response to the shocks (p = 0.252; Fig. 3c), percent time freezing during the tones (p = 0.643; Fig. 3d), and percent time freezing during the inter-stimulus intervals (p = 0.127; Fig. 3e). Additionally, there were no differences between males and females except for the response to shock, where males moved more in response to the shock than females (p = 0.027; Fig. 3c).
Twenty-four hours later, we tested the mice for recall of cued memory, 3 h after the first contextual recall test (described below). Analysis of the response to the tone during the cued recall test indicated that all animals recognized the tone, shown by the increase in percent time freezing in all groups when the tone was played (p < 0.001; Fig. 3f). There were no effects of treatment (p = 0.823), sex (p = 0.905), or interaction between treatment and sex (p = 0.771), suggesting that non-hippocampus-dependent learning and memory was unaffected by our etoposide infusions into the CA1 region.
We also tested the animals for recall of contextual memory at 24 h, and again 2 weeks after training to include assessments of long-term effects of etoposide on hippocampus-dependent memory. There was an effect of treatment, with the animals that received etoposide freezing less at both time points compared to those that received saline (p = 0.029; Fig. 3g). There were no differences between the sexes (p = 0.522), and no interaction between treatment and sex (p = 0.659).
Lastly, we euthanized these animals 15 min after the last contextual test to analyze γH2Ax foci in the CA1 region. There were no long-term differences in this DSB signal based on treatment (p = 0.534) or sex (p = 0.347; Table 2).
Altogether, these data indicate that CA1 infusions of etoposide selectively impair long-term, hippocampusdependent memory.

Discussion
The results of this study provide evidence that DSBs are involved in regulating IEG expression and long-term memory. Etoposide infusions in the hippocampus impaired long-term contextual memory, which is hippocampus-dependent, but not cued memory, which is hippocampus-independent. Mice infused with etoposide did not have higher levels of cFos + cells 2 h after infusion compared to 7 h after infusion. All mice that underwent fear conditioning had more γH2Ax foci in the CA1, CA3, and DG than behaviorally naïve mice, though we observed interactions between behavioral condition and treatment in the CA3 and DG. Additionally, the number of Arc + cells was decreased in the DG and increased in the CA3 region following etoposide infusions. DSBs play an important role in transcriptional elongation during cell division 19,20 and generating molecular diversity in the immune system 21 , but in non-dividing cells (such as neurons) DSBs have been thought of as the result of damaging factors and signals for apoptosis 22 . However, our data add to a growing literature that suggest an adaptive function of DSBs in non-dividing cells via regulating gene expression related to learning and memory. Previous studies have shown that stimulation of electrical activity in cultured hippocampal neurons led to DSBs forming on promoter regions of a small subset of genes, which led to their subsequent up-regulation 9 . These genes-including fos, Npas4, and Egr1-are known to regulate synaptic plasticity and related protein synthesis pathways. In mice, increased levels of γH2Ax foci were observed in relevant brain regions following introduction to a novel environment 8 . Importantly, the increase in this DSB marker was transient: levels returned to baseline after 24 h. This same study also showed that mice carrying dominant Alzheimer's disease genetic mutations had higher baseline levels of γH2Ax foci and those levels failed to return to baseline levels 24 h after introduction to the novel environment. These initial studies indicated that the precise timing and location of physiological DSBs may have a role in learning and memory and could be dysregulated in neurodegenerative disease.
Subsequent studies explored the role of DSBs across cell types in the mouse brain and in different fear conditioning paradigms. Mice tested in contextual fear conditioning showed increased DSBs in the hippocampus and medial prefrontal cortex, many of which occurred on or near genes important for regulating synaptic plasticity 10 . Both neuronal and non-neuronal cells displayed an increase in DSBs in that study; we did not assess cellular sub-types in this current study. Adding to the role of DSBs in fear learning and memory, direct infusion of 0.1 µg/µL etoposide into the mouse prelimbic area impaired trace fear conditioning and disrupted IEG expression 18 . However, 1 ng/µL of etoposide did not alter behavioral performance. Our results extend these findings, demonstrating that an intermediate dose is sufficient to alter DSBs and IEGs in the hippocampus. While our infusions were directly into the CA1 region, we also observed alterations in the CA3 and DG. One possibility is that etoposide itself spread to these regions and directly affected DSB formation and IEG expression. Another is that the intra-hippocampal signaling was altered due to changes in the CA1, thereby indirectly altering DSBs and IEGs in the CA3 and DG 23 . Intriguingly, we discovered an interaction between behavioral condition (naïve or fear conditioned) and treatment (saline or etoposide), where etoposide infusions decreased γH2Ax foci in the DG and CA3 in fear conditioned mice but increased foci in naïve mice. This relationship likely reflects the sensitivity of interfering with the proper timing for adaptive DSBs during periods of learning.
Notably, our results indicate that inducing DSBs in the CA1 region led to blunted IEG expression immediately following fear conditioning. Previous research has shown that etoposide blunted the second wave of IEG mRNA levels (5 h post-training) in the prelimbic area 24 . Ionizing radiation-which induces single and double-strand breaks-has been shown to both up-and down-regulate IEG expression depending on dose, tissue analyzed, and timing [25][26][27] . For example, 2 Gy of X-ray radiation in hippocampal cultured neurons decreased cFos and Egr1 mRNA compared to sham controls at 60 min, but 2 Gy + NMDA activation led to increased Egr1 mRNA 28 . The 2 Gy alone and the 2 Gy + NDMA activation also resulted in increased γH2Ax to similar levels. These data indicate that while DSBs may contribute to IEG expression, alterations to precise regulation and timing can both increase and decrease these genes. Our data here suggest that this dose of etoposide combined with fear conditioning led to a down-regulation, essentially preventing a "peak" like the one observed in the saline-infused, fear conditioned group. This lack of an increase is likely the driving factor in the statistical interactions. However, it is possible that other doses or timing could result in up-regulation, warranting further studies to explore this.
Moreover, our results increase understanding of the central effects of etoposide, which is commonly used in cancer treatment regimens 12,17,29,30 . Very little data exist on the possible side effects of etoposide, as cancer and treatment status confound direct ties to etoposide alone. Etoposide does cross the blood brain barrier, though not well, with only ~ 3% entering the brain 16 . Even in small amounts, the hippocampus may be particularly susceptible to etoposide, as etoposide reduced hippocampal polyamines 30 . However, hippocampus-dependent function was not assessed in that study. Research into combined cancer treatment suggest that the hippocampus is sensitive to chemotherapy: transient treatment with cyclophosphamide and doxorubicin in ovariectomized female rats impaired contextual, but not cued, fear memory 31 . Additionally, following chemotherapy in patients, hippocampal volume and connectivity are altered and correlate with impaired cognition 32,33 . Direct delivery of www.nature.com/scientificreports/ 0.5 mg of etoposide in the ventricles of patients (with peak CSF levels reaching 9 µg/mL) elicited side effects of headaches and meningitis; learning and memory were not assessed, though 17 . Our previous experiment showing that systemic injections of a medium dose of etoposide impaired contextual and cued fear memory tied etoposide specifically to learning and memory impairments 13 . While IEGs generally tend to increase upon stimulation, there is task-and region-dependent specificity 34 . Our Arc and cFos cell count data were correlated only in the DG, but not in the CA1 or CA3 regions of the hippocampus. We also observed an increase in Arc in the CA3, in contrast to Arc in the DG and cFos in all subregions analyzed. cFos immunoreactivity was correlated in the hippocampal sub-regions analyzed, but Arc was not. Others have shown similar results, with region-, task-and time-specific increases in different IEGs 7,35,36 . Within the hippocampus, the CA1 is shown to be required for both acquisition and recall of contextual memory, while the CA3 is only required for acquisition 37 , and timing of context related IEG expression in the CA1, CA3, and DG are distinct 36 . Notably, Arc and cFos fall into two subcategories of IEGs: Arc is classified as an "effector" IEG, while cFos is classified as regulatory transcription factor (RTF) 34,38,39 . Thus, while related, others have found that Arc and cFos RNA levels in rats are correlated in some regions (such as the entorhinal cortex) but not others (like the hippocampus) following spatial learning 34 . This sub-categorization may account for the distinct effects we observed in the hippocampus. Even with this subtle difference, our results suggest that etoposide effects both sub-types of IEGs. Further research should continue to identify specific IEG families that are regulated by DSBinduced gene expression, as well as explore more brain regions and task-dependency.
In summary, these experiments indicate that induction of DSBs in the hippocampus interferes with learning and memory and that proper regulation of DSB timing and location is related to intact learning and memory. Future efforts are warranted to identify the role of DSBs in other forms of learning and other brain regions, such as the amygdala. Additionally, characterizing the effects of a wider range of doses will be important, especially when considering the translational relevance.

Animals.
A total of 84 male (n = 57) and female (n = 27) C57Bl/6 J mice from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) were delivered to OHSU at 5 weeks of age. Surgical cannula implantation occurred at 8-11 weeks of age. Infusion and behavioral testing occurred at 10-13 weeks of age. A total of 9 animals were euthanized due to surgical complications.
All animals were group housed at 5 mice/cage until the day of surgery. Animals were singly housed for 1-week after surgery to allow for recovery; after 1 week, animals were group-housed 3 mice/cage for the remaining duration of experiments. Body weights were recorded weekly starting the day of surgery.
All animal procedures were reviewed and approved by the Oregon Health & Science University IACUC and in accordance with AAALAC and ARRIVE guidelines. Researchers were blinded to the treatment groups throughout all experiments.

Cannula surgery
Surgeries were performed according to our standard protocol 40 . Briefly, mice were treated with oral meloxicam (5 mg/kg) prior to being induced with 5% isoflurane and maintained at 1.5-2% isoflurane throughout surgeries. A water heating pad was used to maintain body temperature; depth of anesthesia and breathing were monitored. Mice were secured in a stereotaxic frame (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL) with fixation bars. Ophthalmic ointment was applied to the eyes, and their heads were shaved. A local subcutaneous injection of lidocaine was given, and heads sterilized by alternating 3 swabs of betadine and 2 swabs of 70% isopropanol. An incision was made on the midline of the scalp to expose the skull and holes drilled bilaterally above the hippocampus (Bregma coordinates: AP: − 1.7 mm, ML: ± 1.0). A bilateral guide cannula (DV projection: 1.2 mm) was then lowered and secured in place with dental cement (Lang Dental Mfg. Co., Wheeling, IL). Once secured, a dummy cannula was inserted and mice removed from the stereotaxic frame. Mice received two days of post-op treatment with oral meloxicam (5 mg/kg).

Infusions and fear conditioning
Etoposide phosphate (etopophos) powder was purchased through the OHSU research pharmacy (E.R. Squibb & Sons, LLC, New Brunswick, NJ). It was diluted in saline to a 20 mg/mL stock solution and stored at − 80 °C until the day before use. The working solution was diluted to a final concentration of 0.1 µg/µL. This dose was chosen based on the previous use of direct infusions of etoposide in the prelimbic area of mice 18 , as well as clinical data for common doses used in patients 17 and accounting for toxicity levels 15 .
For infusions, mice were lightly anesthetized with 5% isoflurane. Mice were removed from anesthesia and gently held by the researcher. Internal cannula were then inserted; 0.3 µL of saline or etoposide were infused in each hemisphere at a rate of 0.3 µL/min. Internal cannula were left in situ for 60 s before mice were placed back into the home cage.
Fear conditioning was conducted 2 h after infusions. We implemented a common protocol previously used by our lab 13 . Briefly, mice were placed in to fear conditioning chambers (MedAssociates, Fairfax, VT) for a baseline period of two minutes before being exposed to 4 tones that co-terminated with a 2 s, 0.5 mA shock. There were 90 s inter-stimulus intervals between each tone-shock pairing. Upon completion, mice were returned to their home cages and fear chambers cleaned with 0.5% acetic acid.
For assessment of long-term hippocampus-dependent and -independent memory, mice were tested in contextual and cued fear conditioning 24 h after training. The contextual trial (hippocampus-dependent) was a 5-min period in the same chambers as training; no tones were presented, and chambers were cleaned with 0.5% acetic acid. For the cued trial (hippocampus-independent), contextual clues were eliminated by inserting a new www.nature.com/scientificreports/ floor, walls, and roof, as well as cleaning with 10% isopropanol. The test was comprised of a 90 s baseline period followed by a 3-min presentation of the same tone played during training. There was a 3 h period between the contextual and cued recall tests. Lastly, we assessed contextual memory again at 2 weeks to explore the lasting effects of hippocampal etoposide infusions 13 .

Tissue collection
We randomly split our animals into two experimental categories: the "immediate" cohorts and the "long-term" cohorts.
To assess effects of infusions on γH2Ax foci and IEGs, a cohort of male mice received infusions, were trained in fear conditioning, and euthanized immediately post-training (2 h after infusion, n = 4/treatment) or 5 h posttraining (7 h after infusion, n = 7-8/treatment; Fig. 1a, 2a). These times were chosen as peak IEG signal ranges from 15 to 120 min after stimulation and typically return to baseline levels around 4 h later [41][42][43] . Additionally, direct infusions of etoposide were shown to lead to increased IEG expression 5 h after infusion 18 . For analysis of long-term effects of infusions on γH2Ax, separate cohorts of male and female mice were euthanized 15 min after completion of the 2-week contextual recall test (n = 13-15/sex/treatment; Fig. 3a).
All animals were euthanized by perfusion. Mice received an i.p. injection of a ketamine-xyline cocktail. Once animals were non-responsive, they were perfused with ice-cold 1X PBS followed by 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA). Brains were removed and soaked in 4% PFA overnight, then sunk in 30% sucrose solution. Brains were then sectioned at 40 μm thickness using a cryostat; the lower left hemisphere was notched to indicate side when sectioning. Sections were stored in cryopreserve until use. Immunohistochemistry cFos and Arc immunohistochemistry. Free floating sections (n = 4/animal) were stained for cFos and Arc using a standard 3,3′-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB) protocol 44,45 . Briefly, tissue was rinsed 3 × 5 min in 1 × PBS and activated with 0.3% hydrogen peroxide for 15 min. Tissue was again rinsed 3 × 5 min in 1 × PBS and blocked in 4% normal goat serum (NGS) in 0.3% PBS-Triton X. Sections were then incubated in primary antibody diluted in 4% NGS for approximately 48 h at 4 °C (rabbit anti-cFos: 1:5000, Santa Cruz, sc-52, lot #G2612; mouse anti-Arc: 1:300, Santa Cruz, sc-17839, lot #K1609). Tissue was washed 3 × 5 min before incubating in secondary antibody diluted in 4% NGS for 1 h (goat anti-rabbit biotinylated: 1:200, Vector Labs, BA-100, lot #ZH0615; goat anti-mouse biotinylated: 1:200, Vector Labs, BA-9200, lot #X0623). After 3 × 5 min washes, avidin-biotin complex was applied for 1 h (Vector labs), and washed 3 × 5 min again. Chromagen was applied for exactly 10 min and the reaction stopped with deionized water, washed 2 × 5 min in 1 × PBS, and slide mounted. Slides were coverslipped with Cytoseal-60 after going through an ethanol-xylene dehydration series. Fluoro-Jade C. To confirm that infusions did not cause widespread cell death, we stained sections for Fluoro-Jade C as previously described 47,48 . Four hippocampal sections per animal were slide mounted and dried for 2 h on a slide warmer at 55 °C. Slides were immersed for 5 min in 80% EtOH with 1% NaOH, then 2 min in 70% EtOH with 1% NaOH. Following a 2 min rinse in ddH 2 O, slides were incubated for 15 min in 0.06% KMnO 4 , then rinsed again for 2 min in ddH 2 O, and incubated for 15 min in 0.0001% Fluoro-Jade C (16A, Histo-Chem, Inc., AR) dissolved in 0.1% acetic acid. Slides were rinsed 3 × 1 min in ddH 2 O, and allowed to air dry overnight in the dark. Slides were cleaned in xylene, then cover slipped with Permount™ mounting medium (Fisher Scientific, MA).

Microscopy and quantification
For all DAB-stained sections, images were captured with an upright Olympus IX81 microscope (Olympus, Center Valley, PA, USA) equipped with CellSens imaging software. Images of each sub-region of the hippocampus were taken at 10 × magnification with 100 ms exposure time. cFos-and Arc-positive cells were identified by the dark nuclear label and counted using ImageJ software (NIH, Bethesda, MD). Fluoro-Jade C sections were also captured using the Olympus IX81 upright microscope at 10 × magnification with 5 s exposure time using a FITC filter.
For γH2Ax-stained fluorescent sections, images were captured with a Zeiss LSM 980 FastAiry microscope (Zeiss, Thornwood, NY, USA) equipped with Zen imaging software. Images of each sub-region of the hippocampus were taken at 63 × magnification in oil immersion. Analysis of γH2Ax foci was performed using ImageJ software. The number of foci was normalized to the area occupied by DAPI for analysis 46 .

Statistics and reproducibility
All data were assessed for normality prior to proceeding with parametric tests. Statistical analyses were conducted using Prism v. 7 (GraphPad, San Diego, CA) and SPSS v 27 (IBM, Armonk, NY) software. www.nature.com/scientificreports/ For fear conditioning, the average motion (au) during the initial baseline period was analyzed with a 2-way ANOVA. The average motion (au) during the shocks, percent time freezing during the tones, and percent time freezing during the inter-stimulus intervals were analyzed using a repeated measures ANOVA with sex and treatment as between-group variables and time as the within-group variable.
For all immunohistochemical analyses, hemisphere was initially included as a variable to confirm there were no hemisphere-dependent differences. In all cases, there were no significant effects or interactions with hemisphere, so it was dropped from the statistical model.
For γH2Ax foci analysis, the number of γH2Ax foci normalized to the DAPI area (μm) was averaged in each section. We then used a repeated measures ANOVA with treatment as the between group variable and section as the within-group variable for analysis.
For analysis of the number of Arc and cFos positive cells, we analyzed the average number of immunopositive cells per section using a repeated measures ANOVA with treatment and time post-training as between-group variables and section as the within-group variables. Sidak's post hoc test was used following these ANOVAs.

Data availability
The datasets generated during and analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.