The endogenous opioid system has been implicated in
sexual behavior, palatable intake, fear, and anxiety. The present study
examined whether ovariectomized female transgenic
preproenkephalin-knockout (PPEKO) mice and their wild-type and
heterozygous controls displayed alterations in fear and anxiety
paradigms, sucrose intake, and lordotic behavior. To examine stability
of responding, three squads of the genotypes were tested across seasons
over a 20-month period. In a fear-conditioning paradigm, PPEKO mice
significantly increased freezing to both fear and fear + shock stimuli
relative to controls. In the open field, PPEKO mice spent significantly
less time and traversed significantly less distance in the center of an
open field than wild-type controls. Further, PPEKO mice spent
significantly less time and tended to be less active on the light side
of a dark–light chamber than controls, indicating that deletion of the
enkephalin gene resulted in exaggerated responses to fear or
anxiety-provoking environments. These selective deficits were observed
consistently across testing squads spanning 20 months and different
seasons. In contrast, PPEKO mice failed to differ from corresponding
controls in sucrose, chow, or water intake across a range
(0.0001–20%) of sucrose concentrations and failed to differ in either
lordotic or female approach to male behaviors when primed with
estradiol and progesterone, thereby arguing strongly for the
selectivity of a fear and anxiety deficit which was not caused by
generalized and nonspecific debilitation. These transgenic data
strongly suggest that opioids, and particularly enkephalin gene
products, are acting naturally to inhibit fear and anxiety.</jats:p