4.3 Article

Medial entorhinal cortex lesions produce delay-dependent disruptions in memory for elapsed time

Journal

NEUROBIOLOGY OF LEARNING AND MEMORY
Volume 185, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2021.107507

Keywords

MEC; Elapsed time; Elapsed time memory; Time duration; Working memory; Long-term memory

Funding

  1. University of San Diego (College of Arts and Sciences, Office of Undergraduate Research)
  2. Mount Holyoke College (Program in Neuroscience and Behavior and Department of Biological Sciences)

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This study examined the role of the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) in rats performing a time duration discrimination task (TDD). The results showed that MEC neural computations are essential for time processing only for delays exceeding 10 seconds.
Our memory for time is a fundamental ability that we use to judge the duration of events, put our experiences into a temporal context, and decide when to initiate actions. The medial entorhinal cortex (MEC), with its direct projections to the hippocampus, has been proposed to be the key source of temporal information for hippocampal time cells. However, the behavioral relevance of such temporal firing patterns remains unclear, as most of the paradigms used for the study of temporal processing and time cells are either spatial tasks or tasks for which MEC function is not required. In this study, we asked whether the MEC is necessary for rats to perform a time duration discrimination task (TDD), in which rats were trained to discriminate between 10-s and 20-s delay intervals. After reaching a 90% performance criterion, the rats were assigned to receive an excitotoxic MEC-lesion or shamlesion surgery. We found that after recovering from surgery, rats with MEC lesions were impaired on the TDD task in comparison to rats with sham lesions, failing to return to criterion performance. Their impairment, however, was specific to the longer, 20-s delay trials. These results indicate that time processing is dependent on MEC neural computations only for delays that exceed 10 s, perhaps because long-term memory resources are needed to keep track of longer time intervals.

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