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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 7388, 2023 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37968289

ABSTRACT

The ability to distinguish sensations that are self-generated from those caused by external events is disrupted in schizophrenia patients. However, the neural circuit abnormalities underlying this sensory impairment and its relationship to the risk factors for the disease is not well understood. To address this, we examined the processing of self-generated sounds in male Df(16)A+/- mice, which model one of the largest genetic risk factors for schizophrenia, the 22q11.2 microdeletion. We find that auditory cortical neurons in Df(16)A+/- mice fail to attenuate their responses to self-generated sounds, recapitulating deficits seen in schizophrenia patients. Notably, the auditory cortex of Df(16)A+/- mice displayed weaker motor-related signals and received fewer inputs from the motor cortex, suggesting an anatomical basis underlying the sensory deficit. These results provide insights into the mechanisms by which a major genetic risk factor for schizophrenia disrupts the top-down processing of sensory information.


Subject(s)
Auditory Cortex , Motor Cortex , Schizophrenia , Humans , Male , Animals , Mice , Schizophrenia/genetics , Auditory Cortex/physiology , Neurons/physiology
2.
Elife ; 92020 11 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33138915

ABSTRACT

Spatial navigation requires landmark coding from two perspectives, relying on viewpoint-invariant and self-referenced representations. The brain encodes information within each reference frame but their interactions and functional dependency remains unclear. Here we investigate the relationship between neurons in the rat's retrosplenial cortex (RSC) and entorhinal cortex (MEC) that increase firing near boundaries of space. Border cells in RSC specifically encode walls, but not objects, and are sensitive to the animal's direction to nearby borders. These egocentric representations are generated independent of visual or whisker sensation but are affected by inputs from MEC that contains allocentric spatial cells. Pharmaco- and optogenetic inhibition of MEC led to a disruption of border coding in RSC, but not vice versa, indicating allocentric-to-egocentric transformation. Finally, RSC border cells fire prospective to the animal's next motion, unlike those in MEC, revealing the MEC-RSC pathway as an extended border coding circuit that implements coordinate transformation to guide navigation behavior.


Subject(s)
Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Gyrus Cinguli/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Space Perception , Spatial Navigation/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Male , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Monte Carlo Method , Normal Distribution , Prospective Studies , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
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