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1.
Science ; 383(6690): 1478-1483, 2024 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38547293

ABSTRACT

Experiences need to be tagged during learning for further consolidation. However, neurophysiological mechanisms that select experiences for lasting memory are not known. By combining large-scale neural recordings in mice with dimensionality reduction techniques, we observed that successive maze traversals were tracked by continuously drifting populations of neurons, providing neuronal signatures of both places visited and events encountered. When the brain state changed during reward consumption, sharp wave ripples (SPW-Rs) occurred on some trials, and their specific spike content decoded the trial blocks that surrounded them. During postexperience sleep, SPW-Rs continued to replay those trial blocks that were reactivated most frequently during waking SPW-Rs. Replay content of awake SPW-Rs may thus provide a neurophysiological tagging mechanism to select aspects of experience that are preserved and consolidated for future use.


Subject(s)
Brain Waves , CA1 Region, Hippocampal , Memory Consolidation , Neurons , Animals , Mice , Neurons/physiology , Memory Consolidation/physiology , Maze Learning , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/cytology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology
2.
Elife ; 122024 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38376907

ABSTRACT

Basal forebrain cholinergic neurons modulate how organisms process and respond to environmental stimuli through impacts on arousal, attention, and memory. It is unknown, however, whether basal forebrain cholinergic neurons are directly involved in conditioned behavior, independent of secondary roles in the processing of external stimuli. Using fluorescent imaging, we found that cholinergic neurons are active during behavioral responding for a reward - even prior to reward delivery and in the absence of discrete stimuli. Photostimulation of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons, or their terminals in the basolateral amygdala (BLA), selectively promoted conditioned responding (licking), but not unconditioned behavior nor innate motor outputs. In vivo electrophysiological recordings during cholinergic photostimulation revealed reward-contingency-dependent suppression of BLA neural activity, but not prefrontal cortex. Finally, ex vivo experiments demonstrated that photostimulation of cholinergic terminals suppressed BLA projection neuron activity via monosynaptic muscarinic receptor signaling, while also facilitating firing in BLA GABAergic interneurons. Taken together, we show that the neural and behavioral effects of basal forebrain cholinergic activation are modulated by reward contingency in a target-specific manner.


Subject(s)
Amygdala , Basolateral Nuclear Complex , Cholinergic Neurons , Interneurons , Reward
3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37987008

ABSTRACT

A general wisdom is that experiences need to be tagged during learning for further consolidation. However, brain mechanisms that select experiences for lasting memory are not known. Combining large-scale neural recordings with a novel application of dimensionality reduction techniques, we observed that successive traversals in the maze were tracked by continuously drifting populations of neurons, providing neuronal signatures of both places visited and events encountered (trial number). When the brain state changed during reward consumption, sharp wave ripples (SPW-Rs) occurred on some trials and their unique spike content most often decoded the trial in which they occurred. In turn, during post-experience sleep, SPW-Rs continued to replay those trials that were reactivated most frequently during awake SPW-Rs. These findings suggest that replay content of awake SPW-Rs provides a tagging mechanism to select aspects of experience that are preserved and consolidated for future use.

4.
Curr Biol ; 32(20): 4451-4464.e7, 2022 10 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36099915

ABSTRACT

Neurons in the retrohippocampal cortices play crucial roles in spatial memory. Many retrohippocampal neurons have firing fields that are selectively active at specific locations, with memory for rewarded locations associated with reorganization of these firing fields. Whether this is the sole strategy for representing spatial memories is unclear. Here, we demonstrate that during a spatial memory task retrohippocampal neurons encode location through ramping activity that extends across segments of a linear track approaching and following a reward, with the rewarded location represented by offsets or switches in the slope of the ramping activity. Ramping representations could be maintained independently of trial outcome and cues marking the reward location, indicating that they result from recall of the track structure. When recorded in an open arena, neurons that generated ramping activity during the spatial memory task were more numerous than grid or border cells, with a majority showing spatial firing that did not meet criteria for classification as grid or border representations. Encoding of rewarded locations through offsets and switches in the slope of ramping activity also emerged in recurrent neural network models trained to solve a similar spatial memory task. Impaired performance of model networks following disruption of outputs from ramping neurons is consistent with this coding strategy supporting navigation to recalled locations of behavioral significance. Our results suggest that encoding of learned spaces by retrohippocampal networks employs both discrete firing fields and continuous ramping representations. We hypothesize that retrohippocampal ramping activity mediates readout of learned models for goal-directed navigation.


Subject(s)
Hippocampus , Neurons , Hippocampus/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Cerebral Cortex , Spatial Memory , Reward
6.
Nat Neurosci ; 23(5): 651-663, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32251386

ABSTRACT

The brain codes continuous spatial, temporal and sensory changes in daily experience. Recent studies suggest that the brain also tracks experience as segmented subdivisions (events), but the neural basis for encoding events remains unclear. Here, we designed a maze for mice, composed of four materially indistinguishable lap events, and identify hippocampal CA1 neurons whose activity are modulated not only by spatial location but also lap number. These 'event-specific rate remapping' (ESR) cells remain lap-specific even when the maze length is unpredictably altered within trials, which suggests that ESR cells treat lap events as fundamental units. The activity pattern of ESR cells is reused to represent lap events when the maze geometry is altered from square to circle, which suggests that it helps transfer knowledge between experiences. ESR activity is separately manipulable from spatial activity, and may therefore constitute an independent hippocampal code: an 'event code' dedicated to organizing experience by events as discrete and transferable units.


Subject(s)
CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Maze Learning/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Mice
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