Caloric restriction modifies spatiotemporal calcium dynamics in mouse hippocampal astrocytes

2021 ◽  
Vol 1868 (7) ◽  
pp. 119034
Author(s):  
Pavel Denisov ◽  
Alexander Popov ◽  
Alexey Brazhe ◽  
Natalia Lazareva ◽  
Alexei Verkhratsky ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastiano Curreli ◽  
Jacopo Bonato ◽  
Sara Romanzi ◽  
Stefano Panzeri ◽  
Tommaso Fellin

Calcium dynamics into astrocytes influence the activity of nearby neuronal structures. However, because previous reports show that astrocytic calcium signals largely mirror neighboring neuronal activity, current information coding models neglect astrocytes. Using simultaneous two-photon calcium imaging of astrocytes and neurons in the hippocampus of mice navigating a virtual environment, we demonstrate that astrocytic calcium signals actively encode spatial information. Calcium events carrying spatial information occurred in topographically organized astrocytic subregions. Importantly, astrocytes encoded spatial information that was complementary and synergistic to that carried by neurons, improving spatial position decoding when astrocytic signals were considered alongside neuronal ones. These results suggest that the complementary place-dependence of localized astrocytic calcium signals regulates clusters of nearby synapses, enabling dynamic, context-dependent, variations in population coding within brain circuits.


2016 ◽  
Vol 43 (7) ◽  
pp. 923-932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryota Nakayama ◽  
Takuya Sasaki ◽  
Kenji F. Tanaka ◽  
Yuji Ikegaya

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adi Doron ◽  
Alon Rubin ◽  
Aviya Benmelech-Chovav ◽  
Netai Benaim ◽  
Tom Carmi ◽  
...  

Astrocytic calcium dynamics have been implicated in the encoding of sensory information, and modulating them has been shown to impact behavior. However, real-time calcium activity of astrocytes in the hippocampus of awake mice has never been investigated. We used 2-photon microscopy to chronically image CA1 astrocytes as mice ran in familiar or novel virtual environments and obtained water rewards. We found that astrocytes exhibit persistent ramping activity towards the reward location in a familiar environment, but not in a novel one. Using linear decoders, we could precisely predict the location of the mouse in a familiar environment from astrocyte activity alone. We could not do the same in the novel environment, suggesting astrocyte spatial activity is experience dependent. This is the first indication that astrocytes can encode location in spatial contexts, thereby extending their known computational capabilities, and their role in cognitive functions.


2004 ◽  
Vol 29 (05) ◽  
Author(s):  
N Byrne ◽  
A Hills ◽  
J Meerkin ◽  
R Ross ◽  
R Laukkanen ◽  
...  

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