ePoster

SCHEMA MEMORY CONSOLIDATION IS HIPPOCAMPAL DEPENDENT

Julia Fechnerand 3 co-authors

University of Tübingen

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-450

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-450

Poster preview

SCHEMA MEMORY CONSOLIDATION IS HIPPOCAMPAL DEPENDENT poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-450

Abstract

Schemas are cognitive representations that enable the integration of new information into existing knowledge structures. Within the framework of active systems consolidation theory, this updating process depends on coordinated activity between the hippocampus and cortical regions, through which information is transferred from the hippocampus to the cortex. It has been shown, for instance, that pharmacological inhibition of the prefrontal cortex disrupts the recall of recently and remotely consolidated schema-memories. However, whether the hippocampus directly mediates schema-related consolidation during post-encoding sleep remains unresolved, as most studies use multi-day training paradigms that limit direct manipulation of hippocampal sleep activity. Thus, we aimed to determine whether schema memory consolidation depends on the hippocampus by inhibiting hippocampal activity in post-schema-encoding sleep. To address this, a group of male rats received a single infusion of Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs) into the dorsal hippocampus. Following recovery, rats were trained in an adapted object–place recognition task, which allowed for abstraction of a spatial rule across eight encoding episodes. After encoding, animals received deschloroclozapine to activate the DREADD receptors and inhibit hippocampal activity during post-encoding sleep, while control animals received saline. Schema memory was tested 24 hours later. Our results showed that hippocampal inhibition via DREADDs during post-encoding sleep impaired schema memory formation, confirming that schema consolidation is hippocampus dependent.

The first part of the picture depicts the timeline of the schema task used. This consisted of 8 trials, where animals were exposed to two objects in different locations. Across trials, one object remains stable and another switches position. After encoding, there is an injection of saline or deschlorozapine (DCZ), followed by 24 hours of sleep ad lib. Finally, there is the retrieval phase, where the stable object is now moved. On the second part of the picture, there is a graph depicting the discrimination index of the retrieval phase, where bars representing the saline group have a positive discrimination index and bars representing the DCZ group has a discrimination index of 0.

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