INHIBITORY MECHANISMS OF MEMORY REACTIVATION
Hospital del Mar Research Institute
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS02-07PM-040
Poster
View posterAbstract
Across multiple stimulation protocols, only fast gamma–like bursting induced long-lasting assembly formation, as evidenced by increased pairwise co-firing, mutual information, and ICA-defined neuronal assemblies among coactivated neurons. Notably, other protocols produced similar or even stronger excitation during induction but failed to generate persistent assemblies. Instead, fast gamma stimulation uniquely enhanced inhibitory responses during coactivation through short-term facilitation at pyramidal-to-interneuron synapses.
This increase in inhibition persisted into subsequent sleep, selectively suppressing co-firing among unrelated neurons and thereby promoting the emergence and stabilization of induced assemblies. Using a ground-truth–based cell-type classifier, we identified somatostatin (Sst) and a subset of parvalbumin (Pvalb) interneurons as the main contributors to this facilitating inhibition, and found that the strength of inhibitory recruitment predicted assembly formation.
To generalize these findings, we examined spontaneously emerging assemblies during learning. Neurons encoding behavioral variables were more strongly inhibited during SPW-Rs than non-related neurons, and Sst recruitment during SPW-Rs was selectively enhanced during post-learning sleep. Finally, chemogenetic perturbation of CA1 interneurons reorganized population activity and disrupted memory reactivation, identifying inhibitory plasticity as a key mechanism organizing neural assemblies during memory consolidation
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