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Selective neuromodulation and mutual inhibition within the <scp>CA3–CA2</scp> system can prioritize sequences for replay

Tristan M. Stöber, Andrew B. Lehr, Torkel Hafting, Arvind Kumar, Marianne Fyhn

2020Hippocampus25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To make optimal use of previous experiences, important neural activity sequences must be prioritized during hippocampal replay. Integrating insights about the interplay between CA3 and CA2, we propose a conceptual framework that allows the two regions to control which sequences are reactivated. We suggest that neuromodulatory-gated plasticity and mutual inhibition enable discrete assembly sequences in both regions to support each other while suppressing competing sequences. This perspective provides a coherent interpretation for a variety of seemingly disconnected functional properties of CA2 and paves the way for a more general understanding of CA2.

Topics & Concepts

NeuromodulationNeuroscienceChemistryPsychologyCentral nervous systemNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchMemory and Neural Mechanisms
Selective neuromodulation and mutual inhibition within the <scp>CA3–CA2</scp> system can prioritize sequences for replay | Litcius