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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 14315, 2024 06 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38906952

ABSTRACT

Head-fixation of mice enables high-resolution monitoring of neuronal activity coupled with precise control of environmental stimuli. Virtual reality can be used to emulate the visual experience of movement during head fixation, but a low inertia floating real-world environment (mobile homecage, MHC) has the potential to engage more sensory modalities and provide a richer experimental environment for complex behavioral tasks. However, it is not known whether mice react to this adapted environment in a similar manner to real environments, or whether the MHC can be used to implement validated, maze-based behavioral tasks. Here, we show that hippocampal place cell representations are intact in the MHC and that the system allows relatively long (20 min) whole-cell patch clamp recordings from dorsal CA1 pyramidal neurons, revealing sub-threshold membrane potential dynamics. Furthermore, mice learn the location of a liquid reward within an adapted T-maze guided by 2-dimensional spatial navigation cues and relearn the location when spatial contingencies are reversed. Bilateral infusions of scopolamine show that this learning is hippocampus-dependent and requires intact cholinergic signalling. Therefore, we characterize the MHC system as an experimental tool to study sub-threshold membrane potential dynamics that underpin complex navigation behaviors.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus , Maze Learning , Spatial Navigation , Animals , Mice , Spatial Navigation/physiology , Male , Hippocampus/physiology , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Membrane Potentials/physiology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Virtual Reality , Scopolamine/pharmacology , Patch-Clamp Techniques/methods
3.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5475, 2021 09 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34531380

ABSTRACT

Acetylcholine release in the hippocampus plays a central role in the formation of new memory representations. An influential but largely untested theory proposes that memory formation requires acetylcholine to enhance responses in CA1 to new sensory information from entorhinal cortex whilst depressing inputs from previously encoded representations in CA3. Here, we show that excitatory inputs from entorhinal cortex and CA3 are depressed equally by synaptic release of acetylcholine in CA1. However, feedforward inhibition from entorhinal cortex exhibits greater depression than CA3 resulting in a selective enhancement of excitatory-inhibitory balance and CA1 activation by entorhinal inputs. Entorhinal and CA3 pathways engage different feedforward interneuron subpopulations and cholinergic modulation of presynaptic function is mediated differentially by muscarinic M3 and M4 receptors, respectively. Thus, our data support a role and mechanisms for acetylcholine to prioritise novel information inputs to CA1 during memory formation.


Subject(s)
Acetylcholine/metabolism , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/physiology , Feedback, Physiological/physiology , Synaptic Transmission/physiology , Animals , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/cytology , Carbachol/pharmacology , Cholinergic Agonists/pharmacology , Entorhinal Cortex/cytology , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/drug effects , Feedback, Physiological/drug effects , Interneurons/metabolism , Interneurons/physiology , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Pyramidal Cells/metabolism , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Receptor, Muscarinic M3/genetics , Receptor, Muscarinic M3/metabolism , Synaptic Transmission/drug effects
4.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4395, 2020 09 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32879322

ABSTRACT

The formation and maintenance of spatial representations within hippocampal cell assemblies is strongly dictated by patterns of inhibition from diverse interneuron populations. Although it is known that inhibitory synaptic strength is malleable, induction of long-term plasticity at distinct inhibitory synapses and its regulation of hippocampal network activity is not well understood. Here, we show that inhibitory synapses from parvalbumin and somatostatin expressing interneurons undergo long-term depression and potentiation respectively (PV-iLTD and SST-iLTP) during physiological activity patterns. Both forms of plasticity rely on T-type calcium channel activation to confer synapse specificity but otherwise employ distinct mechanisms. Since parvalbumin and somatostatin interneurons preferentially target perisomatic and distal dendritic regions respectively of CA1 pyramidal cells, PV-iLTD and SST-iLTP coordinate a reprioritisation of excitatory inputs from entorhinal cortex and CA3. Furthermore, circuit-level modelling reveals that PV-iLTD and SST-iLTP cooperate to stabilise place cells while facilitating representation of multiple unique environments within the hippocampal network.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus/physiology , Interneurons/metabolism , Pyramidal Cells/physiology , Action Potentials , Animals , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/cytology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Calcium Channels, T-Type/metabolism , Channelrhodopsins/metabolism , Hippocampus/cytology , Mice , Optogenetics/methods , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Signal Transduction , Somatostatin/metabolism , Synapses/metabolism
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