Differential Modulation of CA1 and Dentate Gyrus Interneurons During Exploration of Novel Environments

2004 ◽  
Vol 91 (2) ◽  
pp. 863-872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Nitz ◽  
Bruce McNaughton

Parallel recordings of hippocampal principal cells and interneurons were obtained as rats foraged in familiar and adjacent, novel environments. Firing rates of each cell type were assessed as a function of spatial location. Many CA1 interneurons exhibited large decreases in activity in the novel compared with the familiar environment. Dentate gyrus interneurons, however, were much more likely to exhibit large increases in firing in the novel environment. Neither effect was correlated with basic interneuron discharge properties such as degree of theta modulation, baseline firing rate or degree of spatially modulated discharge. Both CA1 and dentate gyrus interneuron rate changes extended into regions of the familiar environment bordering the novel environment. Principal cells in CA1 and dentate gyrus exhibited similar patterns of place specific activity each being indicative of incorporation of novel spatial information into the spatial representation of the familiar environment. The data indicate that inhibitory networks in the CA1 and dentate gyrus areas are modulated in a divergent fashion during the acquisition of novel spatial information and that interneuron activities can be used to detect those regions of an environment subject to redistribution of principal cell spatial activity patterns.

1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (5) ◽  
pp. 1953-1971 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Taube ◽  
H. L. Burton

1. Recent conceptualizations of the neural systems used during navigation have classified two types of sensory information used by animals: landmark cues and internally based (idiothetic; e.g., vestibular, kinesthetic) sensory cues. Previous studies have identified neurons in the postsubiculum and the anterior thalamic nuclei that discharge as a function of the animal's head direction in the horizontal plane. The present study was designed to determine how animals use head direction (HD) cells for spatial orientation and the types of sensory cues involved. 2. HD cell activity was monitored in the postsubiculum and anterior thalamic nucleus of rats in a dual-chamber apparatus in an experiment that consisted of two phases. In the first phase, HD cell activity was monitored as an animal moved from a familiar environment to a novel environment. It was hypothesized that if HD cells were capable of using idiothetic sensory information, then the direction of maximal discharge should remain relatively unchanged as the animal moved into an environment where it was unfamiliar with the landmark cues. In the second phase, HD cells were monitored under conditions in which a conflict situation was introduced between the established landmark cues and the animal's internally generated sensory cues. 3. HD cells were initially recorded in a cylinder containing a single orientation cue (familiar environment). A door was then opened, and the rat entered a U-shaped passageway leading to a rectangular chamber containing a different prominent cue (novel environment). For most HD cells, the preferred direction remained relatively constant between the cylinder and passageway/rectangle, although many cells showed a small (6-30 degrees) shift in their preferred direction in the novel environment. This directional shift was maintained across different episodes in the passageway/rectangle. 4. Before the next session, the orientation cue in the cylinder was rotated 90 degrees, and the animal returned to the cylinder. The cell's preferred direction usually shifted between 45 and 90 degrees in the same direction. 5. The rat was then permitted to walk back through the passageway into the now-familiar rectangle. Immediately upon entering the passageway, the preferred direction returned to its original (prerotation) orientation and remained at this value while the rat was in the rectangle. When the rat was allowed to walk back into the cylinder, one of three outcomes occurred: 1) the cell's preferred direction shifted, such that it remained linked to the cylinder's rotated cue card; 2) the cell's preferred direction remained unchanged from its orientation in the rectangle; or 3) the cell's preferred direction shifted to a new value that lay between the preferred directions for the rotated cylinder condition and rectangle. 6. There was little change in the HD cell's background firing rate, peak firing rate, or directional firing range for both the novel and cue-conflict situations. 7. Simultaneous recordings from multiple cells in different sessions showed that the preferred directions remained "in register" with one another. Thus, when one HD cell shifted its preferred direction a specific amount, the other HD cell also shifted its preferred direction the same amount. 8. Results across different series within the same animal showed that the amount the preferred direction shifted in the first Novel series was about the same amount as the shifts observed in subsequent Novel series. In contrast, as the animal experienced more Conflict series, HD cells tended to use the cylinder's cue card less as an orientation cue when the animal returned to the rotated cylinder condition from the rectangle. 9. These results suggest that HD cells in the postsubiculum and anterior thalamic nuclei receive information from both landmark and idiothetic sensory cues, and when both types of cues are available, HD cells preferentially use the landmark cues as long as they are perceived


Author(s):  
Raquel Garcia-Hernandez ◽  
José María Caramés ◽  
Elena Pérez-Montoyo ◽  
Santiago Canals

Granule cells in the dentate gyrus (DGgc), a brain region important for spatial learning, are part of the engrams formed when an animal explores a new context. Previous work showed that modulation of DGgc activity by perisomatic inhibition bidirectionally regulates memory encoding. Whether this result is due to a differential recruitment of experience-relevant neuronal assemblies or the functional connectivity between them, is not yet known. We combined pharmacogenetic tools (DREADDs) to increase or decrease the activity of parvalbumin (PV)-interneurons in DG while mice encoded spatial information in the Novel Object Location task (NOL). Sixty min after memory encoding in the NOL task animals were sacrificed and their brains processed and quantified for c-Fos staining. Exploration in the NOL task induced a robust increase in the number of c-Fos+ cells across hippocampal subfields. However, the number of c-Fos+ cells, both in the hippocampus and extra-hippocampal structures like the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and the nucleus accumbens, was constant regardless of the inhibitory tone in the DG. Only a moderate increase in c-Fos intensity per cell in DGgc was found in the PV-cell inhibition group. In contrast, we found a significant increase in the correlation between the number of c-Fos+ cells in all quantified neuronal assemblies during PV-inhibition, and a decrease during activation. Together, these data reveal a critical regulatory role of perisomatic inhibition in the dentate gyrus in binding experience-relevant neuronal assemblies in memory.


eLife ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mei Yuan ◽  
Thomas Meyer ◽  
Christoph Benkowitz ◽  
Shakuntala Savanthrapadian ◽  
Laura Ansel-Bollepalli ◽  
...  

Somatostatin-expressing-interneurons (SOMIs) in the dentate gyrus (DG) control formation of granule cell (GC) assemblies during memory acquisition. Hilar-perforant-path-associated interneurons (HIPP cells) have been considered to be synonymous for DG-SOMIs. Deviating from this assumption, we show two functionally contrasting DG-SOMI-types. The classical feedback-inhibitory HIPPs distribute axon fibers in the molecular layer. They are engaged by converging GC-inputs and provide dendritic inhibition to the DG circuitry. In contrast, SOMIs with axon in the hilus, termed hilar interneurons (HILs), provide perisomatic inhibition onto GABAergic cells in the DG and project to the medial septum. Repetitive activation of glutamatergic inputs onto HIPP cells induces long-lasting-depression (LTD) of synaptic transmission but long-term-potentiation (LTP) of synaptic signals in HIL cells. Thus, LTD in HIPPs may assist flow of spatial information from the entorhinal cortex to the DG, whereas LTP in HILs may facilitate the temporal coordination of GCs with activity patterns governed by the medial septum.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebnem Tuncdemir ◽  
Andres Grosmark ◽  
Gergely Turi ◽  
Amei Shank ◽  
John Bowler ◽  
...  

Abstract During exploration, animals form an internal map of an environment by combining information about specific sensory cues or landmarks with the animal’s motion through space, a process which critically depends on the mammalian hippocampus. The dentate gyrus (DG) is the first stage of the hippocampal trisynaptic circuit where self-motion and sensory cue information are integrated, yet it remains unknown how neurons within the DG encode both cue related (“what”) and spatial (“where”) information during cognitive map formation. Using two photon calcium imaging in head fixed mice running on a treadmill, along with on-line sensory cue manipulation at specific track locations, we have identified robust sensory cue responses in DG granule cells largely independent of spatial location. Granule cell cue responses are stable for long periods of time, selective for the modality of the stimulus and accompanied by strong inhibition of the firing of other active neurons. At the same time, there is a smaller fraction of neurons whose firing is spatially tuned but insensitive to the presentation of nearby cues, similar to traditional place cells. These results demonstrate the existence of “cue cells” in addition to the better characterized “place cells” in the DG, an important heterogeneity that has been previously overlooked. We hypothesize that the observed diversity of representations within the granule cell population may support parallel processing of complementary sensory and spatial information and impact the role of the dentate gyrus in spatial navigation and episodic memory.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Greg M. Walter ◽  
James Clark ◽  
Delia Terranova ◽  
Salvatore Cozzolino ◽  
Antonia Cristaudo ◽  
...  

AbstractAdaptive plasticity increases population persistence, but can slow adaptation to changing environments by hiding the effects of different alleles on fitness. However, if plastic responses are no longer adaptive in novel environments, then differences among alleles can emerge and increase genetic variation in fitness that allows rapid adaptation. We tested this hypothesis by transplanting cuttings and seeds of a Sicilian daisy within and outside its native range, and quantifying variation in morphology, physiology, gene expression and fitness. We show that genetic variance in plasticity increases the potential for rapid adaptation to novel environments. Genetic variation in fitness was low across native environments where plasticity effectively tracked familiar environments. In the novel environment however, genetic variation in fitness increased threefold, and correlated with genetic variation in plasticity. Furthermore, genetic variation that can increase fitness in the novel environment had the lowest fitness at the native site, suggesting that adaptation to novel environments relies on genetic variation in plasticity that is selected against in native environments.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Bromis ◽  
Petar P. Raykov ◽  
Leah Wickens ◽  
Warrick Roseboom ◽  
Chris M. Bird

Abstract An episodic memory is specific to an event that occurred at a particular time and place. However, the elements that comprise the event—the location, the people present, and their actions and goals—might be shared with numerous other similar events. Does the brain preferentially represent certain elements of a remembered event? If so, which elements dominate its neural representation: those that are shared across similar events, or the novel elements that define a specific event? We addressed these questions by using a novel experimental paradigm combined with fMRI. Multiple events were created involving conversations between two individuals using the format of a television chat show. Chat show “hosts” occurred repeatedly across multiple events, whereas the “guests” were unique to only one event. Before learning the conversations, participants were scanned while viewing images or names of the (famous) individuals to be used in the study to obtain person-specific activity patterns. After learning all the conversations over a week, participants were scanned for a second time while they recalled each event multiple times. We found that during recall, person-specific activity patterns within the posterior midline network were reinstated for the hosts of the shows but not the guests, and that reinstatement of the hosts was significantly stronger than the reinstatement of the guests. These findings demonstrate that it is the more generic, familiar, and predictable elements of an event that dominate its neural representation compared with the more idiosyncratic, event-defining, elements.


2003 ◽  
Vol 90 (5) ◽  
pp. 2862-2874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. Stackman ◽  
Edward J. Golob ◽  
Joshua P. Bassett ◽  
Jeffrey S. Taube

A subset of neurons in the rat limbic system encodes head direction (HD) by selectively discharging when the rat points its head in a preferred direction in the horizontal plane. The preferred firing direction is sensitive to the location of landmark cues, as well as idiothetic or self-motion cues (i.e., vestibular, motor efference copy, proprioception, and optic flow). Previous studies have shown that the preferred firing direction remains relatively stable (average shift ± 18°) after the rat walks from a familiar environment into a novel one, suggesting that without familiar landmarks, the preferred firing direction can be maintained using idiothetic cues, a process called directional path integration. This study repeated this experiment and manipulated the idiothetic cues available to the rat as it moved between the familiar and novel environment. Motor efference copy/proprioceptive cues were disrupted by passively transporting the animal between the familiar and novel environment. Darkening the room as the animal moved to the novel environment eliminated optic flow cues. HD cell preferred firing directions shifted in the novel environment by an average of 30° after locomotion from the familiar environment with the room lights off; by an average of 70° after passive transport from the familiar environment with the room lights on; and by an average of 67° after passive transport with the room lights off. These findings are consistent with the view that motor efference copy/proprioception cues are important for maintaining the preferred firing direction of HD cells under conditions requiring path integration.


1963 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 251-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Baron

The locomotor activity of mice was observed in an open field which was either novel or had been explored for 20 min. Immediately before entry into the open field, groups of Ss were given either 0, 4, or 12 shocks in an adjoining compartment. Ss given either 4 or 12 shocks showed a suppression of activity relative to the performance of nonshocked control Ss, suppression being more marked in the familiar than in the novel environment. Within the novel environment shocked Ss were less active than nonshocked Ss near the shock compartment but slightly more active in far areas. In the familiar environment, by contrast, suppression of activity among shocked Ss was manifested in all areas of the open field. It was concluded that activity by fearful animals is influenced by their familiarity with the environment in which the activity occurs and that this relationship can be understood in terms of the adaptive consequences of such behavior in the history of the animal.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Masayo Fujita ◽  
Yukiko Ochiai ◽  
Taishi-Clark Takeda ◽  
Yoko Hagino ◽  
Kazuto Kobayashi ◽  
...  

Abstract Dopamine is involved in many important brain functions, including voluntary motor movement. Dysfunction of the dopaminergic system can induce motor impairments, including Parkinson’s disease. We previously found that dopamine-deficient (DD) mice became hyperactive in a novel environment 72 h after the last injection of L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-DOPA) when dopamine was almost completely depleted. In the present study, we investigated neuronal activity in hippocampal subregions during hyperactivity by measuring Fos expression levels using immunohistochemistry. Dopamine-deficient mice were maintained on daily intraperitoneal injections of 50 mg/kg L-DOPA. Seventy-two hours after the last L-DOPA injection, DD mice were exposed to a novel environment for 1, 2, or 4 h, and then brains were collected. In wildtype mice, the number of Fos-immunopositive neurons significantly increased in the hippocampal CA1 region after 1 h of exposure to the novel environment and then decreased. In DD mice, the number of Fos-immunopositive neurons gradually increased and then significantly increased after 4 h of exposure to the novel environment. The number of Fos-immunopositive neurons also significantly increased in the CA3 region and dentate gyrus in DD mice after 4 h of exposure to the novel environment. These results indicate that the delayed and prolonged excitation of hippocampal neurons in the CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus that is caused by dopamine depletion might be involved in hyperactivity in DD mice.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebnem N. Tuncdemir ◽  
Andres D. Grosmark ◽  
Gergely Turi ◽  
Amei Shank ◽  
Jack Bowler ◽  
...  

AbstractDuring exploration, animals form an internal map of an environment by combining information about specific sensory cues or landmarks with the animal’s motion through space, a process which critically depends on the mammalian hippocampus. The dentate gyrus (DG) is the first stage of the hippocampal trisynaptic circuit where self-motion and sensory cue information are integrated, yet it remains unknown how neurons within the DG encode both cue related (“what”) and spatial (“where”) information during cognitive map formation. Using two photon calcium imaging in head fixed mice running on a treadmill, along with on-line sensory cue manipulation at specific track locations, we have identified robust sensory cue responses in DG granule cells largely independent of spatial location. Granule cell cue responses are stable for long periods of time, selective for the modality of the stimulus and accompanied by strong inhibition of the firing of other active neurons. At the same time, there is a smaller fraction of neurons whose firing is spatially tuned but insensitive to the presentation of nearby cues, similar to traditional place cells. These results demonstrate the existence of “cue cells” in addition to the better characterized “place cells” in the DG, an important heterogeneity that has been previously overlooked. We hypothesize that the observed diversity of representations within the granule cell population may support parallel processing of complementary sensory and spatial information and impact the role of the dentate gyrus in spatial navigation and episodic memory.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document