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Building hippocampal circuits to learn and remember: Insights into the development of human memory

Journal

BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 254, Issue -, Pages 8-21

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2013.02.007

Keywords

Amnesia; Spatial memory; Development; Hippocampus; Neural networks; Gene expression

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [PP00A_106701, PP00P3_124536, PMPDP3_122844, PMPDP3_128996]
  2. Joe P. Tupin award (Dept of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, UC Davis)
  3. NARSAD Young Investigator Award (National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression)
  4. NIH [R01-NS16980]
  5. California National Primate Research Center [RR00169]
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [PMPDP3_128996, PMPDP3_122844, PP00P3_124536] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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The hippocampal formation is essential for the processing of episodic memories for autobiographical events that happen in unique spatiotemporal contexts. Interestingly, before 2 years of age, children are unable to form or store episodic memories for recall later in life, a phenomenon known as infantile amnesia. From 2 to 7 years of age, there are fewer memories than predicted based on a forgetting function alone, a phenomenon known as childhood amnesia. Here, we discuss the postnatal maturation of the primate hippocampal formation with the goal of characterizing the development of the neurobiological substrates thought to subserve the emergence of episodic memory. Distinct regions, layers and cells of the hippocampal formation exhibit different profiles of structural and molecular development during early postnatal life. The protracted period of neuronal addition and maturation in the dentate gyrus is accompanied by the late maturation of specific layers in different hippocampal regions that are located downstream from the dentate gyrus, particularly CA3. In contrast, distinct layers in several hippocampal regions, particularly CA1, which receive direct projections from the entorhinal cortex, exhibit an early maturation. In addition, hippocampal regions that are more highly interconnected with subcortical structures, including the subiculum, presubiculum, parasubiculum and CA2, mature even earlier. These findings, together with our studies of the development of human spatial memory, support the hypothesis that the differential maturation of distinct hippocampal circuits might underlie the differential emergence of specific hippocampus-dependent memory processes, culminating in the emergence of episodic memory concomitant with the maturation of all hippocampal circuits. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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