4.8 Article

Task-selective place cells show behaviorally driven dynamics during learning and stability during memory recall

期刊

CELL REPORTS
卷 41, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111700

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资金

  1. NIH BRAIN INITIATIVE [1R01NS109994]
  2. NIH [1R01NS109362]
  3. Mathers Charitable Foundation Investigator Award
  4. McKnight Scholar Award in Neuroscience
  5. McKnight Endowment Fund for Neuroscience Mathew Pecot URM Award
  6. KlingensteinSimons Fellowship Award in Neuroscience
  7. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
  8. Whitehall Research Grant
  9. American Epilepsy Society Junior Investigator Award
  10. Blas Frangione Young Investigator Research Grant
  11. New York University Whitehead Fellowship for Junior Faculty in Biomedical and Biological Sciences
  12. Leon Levy Foundation Award
  13. NYU Grossman School of Medicine MSTP NIH [5T32 GM007308]
  14. HHMI extension grant [T32AG052909]
  15. Mathers Charitable Foundation
  16. McKnight Endowment Fund [5T32NS86750]

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Decades of research have shown that hippocampal activity plays a crucial role in representing learned experiences and contexts, allowing individuals to form long-term memories and adapt behavior to changing environments. Recent studies suggest that hippocampal representations can drift over time, but it is hypothesized that learning rules and structured attention can stabilize these representations and maintain stable memories.
Decades of work propose that hippocampal activity supports internal representation of learned experiences and contexts, allowing individuals to form long-term memories and quickly adapt behavior to changing environments. However, recent studies insinuate hippocampal representations can drift over time, raising the question: how could the hippocampus hold stable memories when activity of its neuronal maps fluctuates? We hypothesized that task-dependent hippocampal maps set by learning rules and structured attention stabilize as a function of behavioral performance. To test this, we imaged hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons during learning and memory recall phases of a new task where mice use odor cues to navigate between two reward zones. Across learning, both orthogonal and overlapping task-dependent place maps form rapidly, discriminating trial context with strong correlation to behavioral performance. Once formed, task-selective place maps show increased long-term stability during memory recall phases. We conclude that memory demand and attention stabilize hippocampal activity to maintain contextually rich spatial representations.

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