4.7 Article

Thalamic and Entorhinal Network Activity Differently Modulates the Functional Development of Prefrontal-Hippocampal Interactions

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 13, Pages 3676-3690

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3232-15.2016

Keywords

development; directed interactions; networks; oscillations; synchrony

Categories

Funding

  1. Emmy Noether-Program [Ha4466/3-1]
  2. Priority Program 1665 [Ha4466/7-1]
  3. Sonderforschungsbereich Grant German Research Foundation [936 (B5)]
  4. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [01GQ0809]

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Precise information flow during mnemonic and executive tasks requires the coactivation of adult prefrontal and hippocampal networks in oscillatory rhythms. This interplay emerges early in life, most likely as an anticipatory template of later cognitive performance. At neonatal age, hippocampal theta bursts drive the generation of prefrontal theta-gamma oscillations. In the absence of direct reciprocal interactions, the question arises of which feedback mechanisms control the early entrainment of prefrontal-hippocampal networks. Here, we demonstrate that prefrontal-hippocampal activity couples with discontinuous theta oscillations and neuronal firing in both lateral entorhinal cortex and ventral midline thalamic nuclei of neonatal rats. However, these two brain areas have different contributions to the neonatal long-range communication. The entorhinal cortex mainly modulates the hippocampal activity via direct axonal projections. In contrast, thalamic theta bursts are controlled by the prefrontal cortex via mutual projections and contribute to hippocampal activity. Thus, the neonatal prefrontal cortex modulates the level of hippocampal activation by directed interactions with the ventral midline thalamus. Similar to the adult task-related communication, theta-band activity ensures the feedback control of long-range coupling in the developing brain.

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