Litcius/Paper detail

Enhanced Reactivation of Remapping Place Cells during Aversive Learning

Jake Ormond, Simon A. Serka, Joshua P. Johansen

2023Journal of Neuroscience32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Study of the hippocampal place cell system has greatly enhanced our understanding of memory encoding for distinct places, but how episodic memories for distinct experiences occurring within familiar environments are encoded is less clear. We developed a spatial decision-making task in which male rats learned to navigate a multiarm maze to a goal location for food reward while avoiding maze arms in which aversive stimuli were delivered. Task learning induced partial remapping in CA1 place cells, allowing us to identify both remapping and stable cell populations. Remapping cells were recruited into sharp-wave ripples and associated replay events to a greater extent than stable cells, despite having similar firing rates during navigation of the maze. Our results suggest that recruitment into replay events may be a mechanism to incorporate new contextual information into a previously formed and stabilized spatial representation. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Hippocampal place cells provide a map of space that animals use to navigate. This map can change to reflect changes in the physical properties of the environment in which the animal finds itself, and also in response to nonphysical contextual changes, such as changes in the valence of specific locations within that environment. We show here that cells which change their spatial tuning after a change in context are preferentially recruited into sharp-wave ripple-associated replay events compared with stable nonremapping cells. Thus, our data lend strong support to the hypothesis that replay is a mechanism for the storage of new spatial maps.

Topics & Concepts

Place cellContext (archaeology)Reinforcement learningEncoding (memory)Episodic memoryNeuroscienceHippocampal formationComputer scienceTask (project management)Sensory cueMechanism (biology)PsychologyCognitive psychologyCognitionArtificial intelligenceBiologyManagementPaleontologyPhilosophyEconomicsEpistemologyMemory and Neural MechanismsNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchSleep and Wakefulness Research