4.8 Article

A direct lateral entorhinal cortex to hippocampal CA2 circuit conveys social information required for social memory

Journal

NEURON
Volume 110, Issue 9, Pages 1559-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.01.028

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01-MH104602, R01-MH106629]

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The dorsal CA2 region of the hippocampus is crucial for social memory, and it receives direct inputs from the medial and lateral subdivisions of entorhinal cortex, with the latter being selectively activated during social exploration and required for social memory.
The hippocampus is essential for different forms of declarative memory, including social memory, the ability to recognize and remember a conspecific. Although recent studies identify the importance of the dorsal CA2 region of the hippocampus in social memory storage, little is known about its sources of social information. Because CA2, like other hippocampal regions, receives its major source of spatial and non-spatial information from the medial and lateral subdivisions of entorhinal cortex (MEC and LEC), respectively, we investigated the importance of these inputs for social memory. Whereas MEC inputs to CA2 are dispensable, the direct inputs to CA2 from LEC are both selectively activated during social exploration and required for social memory. This selective behavioral role of LEC is reflected in the stronger excitatory drive it provides to CA2 compared with MEC. Thus, a direct LEC / CA2 circuit is tuned to convey social information that is critical for social memory.

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