4.7 Article

Experience-Dependent Regulation of Dentate Gyrus Excitability by Adult-Born Granule Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 35, Issue 33, Pages 11656-11666

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0885-15.2015

Keywords

dentate gyrus; field potential; maturing neuron; neurogenesis; place avoidance task

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AG043688, R01MH084038, R21NS091830, R37 MH068542, NYSTEM-C029157]

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Behavioral studies have established a role for adult-born dentate granule cells in discriminating between similar memories. However, it is unclear how these cells mediate memory discrimination. Excitability is enhanced in maturing adult-born neurons, spurring the hypothesis that the activity of these cells directly encodes and stores memories. An alternative hypothesis posits that maturing neurons indirectly contribute to memory encoding by regulating excitation-inhibition balance. We evaluated these alternatives by using dentate-sensitive active place avoidance tasks to assess experience-dependent changes in dentate field potentials in the presence and absence of neurogenesis. Before training, X-ray ablation of adult neurogenesis-reduced dentate responses to perforant-path stimulation and shifted EPSP-spike coupling leftward. These differences were unchanged after place avoidance training with the shock zone in the initial location, which both groups learned to avoid equally well. In contrast, sham-treated mice decreased dentate responses and shifted EPSP-spike coupling leftward after the shock zone was relocated, whereas X-irradiated mice failed to show these changes in dentate function and were impaired on this test of memory discrimination. During place avoidance, excitation-inhibition coupled neural synchrony in dentate local field potentials was reduced in X-irradiated mice, especially in the theta band. The difference was most prominent during conflict learning, which is impaired in the X-irradiated mice. These findings indicate that maturing adult-born neurons regulate both functional network plasticity in response to memory discrimination and dentate excitation-inhibition coordination. The most parsimonious interpretation of these results is that adult neurogenesis indirectly regulates hippocampal information processing.

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