Litcius/Paper detail

Rapid synaptic plasticity contributes to a learned conjunctive code of position and choice-related information in the hippocampus

Xinyu Zhao, Ching-Lung Hsu, Nelson Spruston

2021Neuron86 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To successfully perform goal-directed navigation, animals must know where they are and what they are doing-e.g., looking for water, bringing food back to the nest, or escaping from a predator. Hippocampal neurons code for these critical variables conjunctively, but little is known about how this "where/what" code is formed or flexibly routed to other brain regions. To address these questions, we performed intracellular whole-cell recordings in mouse CA1 during a cued, two-choice virtual navigation task. We demonstrate that plateau potentials in CA1 pyramidal neurons rapidly strengthen synaptic inputs carrying conjunctive information about position and choice. Plasticity-induced response fields were modulated by cues only in animals previously trained to collect rewards based on available cues. Thus, we reveal that gradual learning is required for the formation of a conjunctive population code, upstream of CA1, while plateau-potential-induced synaptic plasticity in CA1 enables flexible routing of the code to downstream brain regions.

Topics & Concepts

HippocampusNeuroscienceSynaptic plasticityPsychologyPosition (finance)Computer scienceBiologyBusinessFinanceReceptorBiochemistryMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchSleep and Wakefulness Research