4.5 Article

Prefrontal-Hippocampal Pathways Through the Nucleus Reuniens Are Functionally Biased by Brain State

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROANATOMY
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnana.2021.804872

Keywords

urethane (carbamate); non-REM; theta; slow oscillation; REM (rapid eye movement); memory-consolidation

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [22016-06576, 2021-02926]
  2. NSERC [435843]
  3. NSERC Doctoral Postgraduate Scholarship

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Circuit-level communication between different brain regions, especially between the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, is important for memory processes. The thalamic nucleus reuniens plays a role in coordinating slow-wave activity between these regions. Spontaneous brain state changes during anesthesia were used to assess communication between the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus during activated and deactivated states. The results suggest that forebrain state and sleep-like rhythms influence communication and coordination in this memory circuit.
Circuit-level communication between disparate brain regions is fundamental for the complexities of the central nervous system operation. Co-ordinated bouts of rhythmic activity between the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and hippocampus (HPC), in particular, are important for mnemonic processes. This is true during awake behavior, as well as during offline states like sleep. We have recently shown that the anatomically interposed thalamic nucleus reuniens (RE) has a role in coordinating slow-wave activity between the PFC and HPC. Here, we took advantage of spontaneous brain state changes occurring during urethane anesthesia in order to assess if PFC-HPC communication was modified during activated (theta) vs. deactivated (slow oscillation: SO) states. These forebrain states are highly similar to those expressed during rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM stages of natural sleep, respectively. Evoked potentials and excitatory current sinks in the HPC were consistently larger during SO states, regardless of whether PFC or RE afferents were stimulated. Interestingly, PFC stimulation during theta appeared to preferentially use a cortico-cortical pathway, presumably involving the entorhinal cortex as opposed to the more direct RE to HPC conduit. Optogenetic and chemogenetic manipulations of the RE suggested that this state-dependent biasing was mediated by responding in the RE itself. Finally, the phase of both ongoing rhythms also appeared to be an important factor in modulating HPC responses, with maximal field excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) occurring during the negative-going phase of both rhythms. Thus, forebrain state plays an important role in how communication takes place across the PFC and HPC, with the RE as a determining factor in how this is shaped. Furthermore, ongoing sleep-like rhythms influence the coordination and perhaps potentiate excitatory processing in this extended episodic memory circuit. Our results have direct implications for activity-dependent processes relevant to sleep-dependent memory consolidation.

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