4.7 Article

Spatial Representations in Rat Orbitofrontal Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 32, Pages 6933-6945

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0830-21.2021

Keywords

cognitive map; grid cells; hippocampus; orbitofrontal cortex; place cells; rat

Categories

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program at the National Institute on Drug Abuse [ZIA-DA000587]

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Research indicates that OFC neurons exhibit spatial firing fields in a manner similar to hippocampus when engaged in a free-foraging task, with different representations observed between flavored and unflavored conditions resembling hippocampal remapping.
The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and hippocampus share striking cognitive and functional similarities. As a result, both structures have been proposed to encode cognitive maps that provide useful scaffolds for planning complex behaviors. However, while this function has been exemplified by spatial coding in neurons of hippocampal regions-particularly place and grid cells-spatial representations in the OFC have been investigated far less. Here we sought to address this by recording OFC neurons from male rats engaged in an open-field foraging task like that originally developed to characterize place fields in rodent hippocampal neurons. Single-unit activity was recorded as rats searched for food pellets scattered randomly throughout a large enclosure. In some sessions, particular flavors of food occurred more frequently in particular parts of the enclosure; in others, only a single flavor was used. OFC neurons showed spatially localized firing fields in both conditions, and representations changed between flavored and unflavored foraging periods in a manner reminiscent of remapping in the hippocampus. Compared with hippocampal recordings taken under similar behavioral conditions, OFC spatial representations were less temporally reliable, and there was no significant evidence of grid tuning in OFC neurons. These data confirm that OFC neurons show spatial firing fields in a large, two-dimensional environment in a manner similar to hippocampus. Consistent with the focus of the OFC on biological meaning and goals, spatial coding was weaker than in hippocampus and influenced by outcome identity.

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