Execution of new trajectories toward a stable goal without a functional hippocampus

Author:

Duszkiewicz Adrian J.12ORCID,Rossato Janine I.13,Moreno Andrea145,Takeuchi Tomonori15,Yamasaki Miwako6,Genzel Lisa17,Spooner Patrick1,Canals Santiago4,Morris Richard G. M.14

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences, Edinburgh Neuroscience University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

2. Department of Psychology University of Stirling Stirling Scotland UK

3. Department of Physiology Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte Rio Grande do Norte Brazil

4. Instituto de Neurociencias, CSIC‐UMH San Juan de Alicante Spain

5. Department of Biomedicine, Danish Research Institute of Translational Neuroscience (DANDRITE) Aarhus University Aarhus C Denmark

6. Department of Anatomy, Graduate School of Medicine Hokkaido University Sapporo Japan

7. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour Radboud University and Radboudumc Nijmegen The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractThe hippocampus is a critical component of a mammalian spatial navigation system, with the firing sequences of hippocampal place cells during sleep or immobility constituting a “replay” of an animal's past trajectories. A novel spatial navigation task recently revealed that such “replay” sequences of place fields can also prospectively map onto imminent new paths to a goal that occupies a stable location during each session. It was hypothesized that such “prospective replay” sequences may play a causal role in goal‐directed navigation. In the present study, we query this putative causal role in finding only minimal effects of muscimol‐induced inactivation of the dorsal and intermediate hippocampus on the same spatial navigation task. The concentration of muscimol used demonstrably inhibited hippocampal cell firing in vivo and caused a severe deficit in a hippocampal‐dependent “episodic‐like” spatial memory task in a watermaze. These findings call into question whether “prospective replay” of an imminent and direct path is actually necessary for its execution in certain navigational tasks.

Funder

Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, Aarhus Universitet

European Commission

Lundbeckfonden

Novo Nordisk Fonden

Wellcome Trust

European Molecular Biology Organization

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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