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Developmentally Structured Coactivity

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Developmentally structured coactivity in the hippocampal trisynaptic loop

Roman Huszár

Buzsáki Lab, New York University

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Tuesday, April 4, 2023

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Tuesday, April 4, 2023

5:00 PM Europe/Berlin

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Abstract

The hippocampus is a key player in learning and memory. Research into this brain structure has long emphasized its plasticity and flexibility, though recent reports have come to appreciate its remarkably stable firing patterns. How novel information incorporates itself into networks that maintain their ongoing dynamics remains an open question, largely due to a lack of experimental access points into network stability. Development may provide one such access point. To explore this hypothesis, we birthdated CA1 pyramidal neurons using in-utero electroporation and examined their functional features in freely moving, adult mice. We show that CA1 pyramidal neurons of the same embryonic birthdate exhibit prominent cofiring across different brain states, including behavior in the form of overlapping place fields. Spatial representations remapped across different environments in a manner that preserves the biased correlation patterns between same birthdate neurons. These features of CA1 activity could partially be explained by structured connectivity between pyramidal cells and local interneurons. These observations suggest the existence of developmentally installed circuit motifs that impose powerful constraints on the statistics of hippocampal output.

Topics

CA1 pyramidal neuronscircuit motifscoactivityembryonic birthdatehippocampuslocal interneuronsnetwork stabilityplace fieldsspatial representations

About the Speaker

Roman Huszár

Buzsáki Lab, New York University

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@r_huszar

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twitter.com/r_huszar

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