Animals learn from past experience to guide future behavior and improve survival. This ability relies in part on specific episodic memories of past events encoded by neuronal activity and stored by updated connectivity between neurons. The unique architecture and activity of the hippocampus and related cortical regions are crucial for supporting these episodic memories. Hippocampal models propose the need for a pattern separation function to disambiguate similar memories and a pattern completion function to recall the full breadth of an experience from a partial cue. Past work suggests that neuronal activity in the dentate gyrus (DG) of hippocampus contributes to memory-guided navigation and plays a role in pattern separation. We tested the role of specific DG neuronal ensembles (i.e. engrams) in supporting the pattern separation function and altering downstream neural activity and, ultimately, behavior. To that end, we used an activity-dependent labeling paradigm to identify and manipulate engram ensembles during navigational and contextual fear conditioning (CFC) tasks. The results of our first experiment revealed that the DG partially disambiguates specific maze trajectories while still exhibiting greater overlap than chance levels. These findings suggest that the DG contributes to memory-guided navigation by both pattern separation and completion. Our second experiment manipulated nonspecific memory-related DG populations to assess the functional role of these cells in task generalization across contexts and ongoing spatial working memory. Optogenetic activation of these ensembles disrupted performance accuracy and exhibited a time-dependent impairment effect suggesting a role of the DG in task generalization between contexts. The final experiments investigated the physiological ramifications of artificial memory ensemble reactivation during ongoing navigation behavior. We recorded local field potential (LFP) and single unit responses in mouse DG and CA1 during artificial reactivation of a DG-mediated CFC memory engram. Stimulation of the DG entrained LFP and individual cell spiking in a subpopulation of CA1 pyramidal cells. Their spatial information was disrupted by stimulation despite stable navigational representation before and after the manipulation. Further, the presence of stimulation could be reliably decoded by the firing rate of the network, suggesting that engram reactivation forced the CA1 to adopt a repeatable state, perhaps to support behavioral expression of memories. In summary, my dissertation work presents empirical and theoretical evidence for the role of the dentate gyrus as a single node of an extended separation/completion circuit distributed anatomically and temporally as a neural mechanism supporting episodic memory.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/47963 |
Date | 26 January 2024 |
Creators | Wilmerding, Lucius Kelton |
Contributors | Hasselmo, Michael E., Ramirez, Steve |
Source Sets | Boston University |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis/Dissertation |
Rights | Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ |
Page generated in 0.0262 seconds