4.8 Article

Reset of hippocampal-prefrontal circuitry facilitates learning

期刊

NATURE
卷 591, 期 7851, 页码 615-+

出版社

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03272-1

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资金

  1. NIMH [R01 MH096274, T32 MH018870-29, R21 MH117454, K08 MH109735]
  2. Leon Levy Foundation
  3. Hope for Depression Research Foundation
  4. BBRF Young Investigator Award
  5. National Institutes of Health Intramural Research Program

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Novelty helps reset neural circuits in the brain to promote adaptive learning. Exposure to novelty environment reorganizes neural circuits in mice, enhancing learning-related plasticity, and this effect can be mediated by dopamine D1 receptors.
The ability to rapidly adapt to novel situations is essential for survival, and this flexibility is impaired in many neuropsychiatric disorders(1). Thus, understanding whether and how novelty prepares, or primes, brain circuitry to facilitate cognitive flexibility has important translational relevance. Exposure to novelty recruits the hippocampus and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)(2) and may prime hippocampal-prefrontal circuitry for subsequent learning-associated plasticity. Here we show that novelty resets the neural circuits that link the ventral hippocampus (vHPC) and the mPFC, facilitating the ability to overcome an established strategy. Exposing mice to novelty disrupted a previously encoded strategy by reorganizing vHPC activity to local theta (4-12 Hz) oscillations and weakening existing vHPC-mPFC connectivity. As mice subsequently adapted to a new task, vHPC neurons developed new task-associated activity, vHPC-mPFC connectivity was strengthened, and mPFC neurons updated to encode the new rules. Without novelty, however, mice adhered to their established strategy. Blocking dopamine D1 receptors (D1Rs) or inhibiting novelty-tagged cells that express D1Rs in the vHPC prevented these behavioural and physiological effects of novelty. Furthermore, activation of D1Rs mimicked the effects of novelty. These results suggest that novelty promotes adaptive learning by D1R-mediated resetting of vHPC-mPFC circuitry, thereby enabling subsequent learning-associated circuit plasticity.

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