4.7 Article

Hippocampal CA1 circuitry dynamically gates direct cortical inputs preferentially at theta frequencies

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 42, Pages 9567-9580

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2992-05.2005

Keywords

voltage-sensitive dye imaging; circuit integration; temporoammonic; inhibition; gating; theta cycle

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS041811, R37 NS032403, R37 NS032403-13, R01 NS038572, R01 NS-41811, R01 NS038572-08, R37 NS-32403, R37 NS032403-12, R01 NS038572-07] Funding Source: Medline

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Hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons receive intrahippocampal and extrahipppocampal inputs during theta cycle, whose relative timing and magnitude regulate the probability of CA1 pyramidal cell spiking. Extrahippocampal inputs, giving rise to the primary theta dipole in CA1 stratum lacunosum moleculare, are conveyed by the temporoammonic pathway. The temporoammonic pathway impinging onto the CA1 distal apical dendritic tuft is the most electrotonically distant from the perisomatic region yet is critical in regulating CA1 place cell activity during theta cycles. How does local hippocampal circuitry regulate the integration of this essential, but electrotonically distant, input within the theta period? Using whole-cell somatic recording and voltage-sensitive dye imaging with simultaneous dendritic recording of CA1 pyramidal cell responses, we demonstrate that temporoammonic EPSPs are normally compartmentalized to the apical dendritic tuft by feedforward inhibition. However, when this input is preceded at a one-half theta cycle interval by proximally targeted Schaffer collateral activity, temporoammonic EPSPs propagate to the soma through a joint, codependent mechanism involving activation of Schaffer-specific NMDA receptors and presynaptic inhibition of GABAergic terminals. These afferent interactions, tuned for synaptic inputs arriving one-half theta interval apart, are in turn modulated by feedback inhibition initiated via axon collaterals of pyramidal cells. Therefore, CA1 circuit integration of excitatory inputs endows the CA1 principal cell with a novel property: the ability to function as a temporally specific AND gate that provides for sequence-dependent readout of distal inputs.

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