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The EMBO Journal Nov 2023For decades, the mammalian hippocampus has been the focus of cellular, anatomical, behavioral, and computational studies aimed at understanding the fundamental... (Review)
Review
For decades, the mammalian hippocampus has been the focus of cellular, anatomical, behavioral, and computational studies aimed at understanding the fundamental mechanisms underlying cognition. Long recognized as the brain's seat for learning and memory, a wealth of knowledge has been accumulated on how the hippocampus processes sensory input, builds complex associations between objects, events, and space, and stores this information in the form of memories to be retrieved later in life. However, despite major efforts, our understanding of hippocampal cognitive function remains fragmentary, and models trying to explain it are continually revisited. Here, we review the literature across all above-mentioned domains and offer a new perspective by bringing attention to the most distinctive, and generally neglected, feature of the mammalian hippocampal formation, namely, the structural separability of the two blades of the dentate gyrus into "supra-pyramidal" and "infra-pyramidal". Next, we discuss recent reports supporting differential effects of adult neurogenesis in the regulation of mature granule cell activity in these two blades. We propose a model for how differences in connectivity and adult neurogenesis in the two blades can potentially provide a substrate for subtly different cognitive functions.
Topics: Animals; Dentate Gyrus; Hippocampus; Neurons; Learning; Memory; Neurogenesis; Mammals
PubMed: 37743770
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2023113524 -
Proceedings of the National Academy of... Dec 2023Somatostatin-expressing interneurons (SOMIs) in the mouse dentate gyrus (DG) receive feedforward excitation from granule cell (GC) mossy fiber (MF) synapses and provide...
Somatostatin-expressing interneurons (SOMIs) in the mouse dentate gyrus (DG) receive feedforward excitation from granule cell (GC) mossy fiber (MF) synapses and provide feedback lateral inhibition onto GC dendrites to support environment representation in the DG network. Although this microcircuitry has been implicated in memory formation, little is known about activity-dependent plastic changes at MF-SOMI synapses and their influence on behavior. Here, we report that the metabotropic glutamate receptor 1α (mGluR1α) is required for the induction of associative long-term potentiation (LTP) at MF-SOMI synapses. Pharmacological block of mGluR1α, but not mGluR5, prevented synaptic weight changes. LTP at MF-SOMI synapses was postsynaptically induced, required increased intracellular Ca, involved G-protein-mediated and Ca-dependent (extracellular signal-regulated kinase) ERK1/2 pathways, and the activation of NMDA receptors. Specific knockdown of mGluR1α in DG-SOMIs by small hairpin RNA expression prevented MF-SOMI LTP, reduced SOMI recruitment, and impaired object location memory. Thus, postsynaptic mGluR1α-mediated MF-plasticity at SOMI input synapses critically supports DG-dependent mnemonic functions.
Topics: Mice; Animals; Mossy Fibers, Hippocampal; Neuronal Plasticity; Interneurons; Long-Term Potentiation; Synapses; Somatostatin; Dentate Gyrus; Synaptic Transmission
PubMed: 38091292
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2312752120 -
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory Sep 2021At the encounter with a novel environment, contextual memory formation is greatly enhanced, accompanied with increased arousal and active exploration. Although this... (Review)
Review
At the encounter with a novel environment, contextual memory formation is greatly enhanced, accompanied with increased arousal and active exploration. Although this phenomenon has been widely observed in animal and human daily life, how the novelty in the environment is detected and contributes to contextual memory formation has lately started to be unveiled. The hippocampus has been studied for many decades for its largely known roles in encoding spatial memory, and a growing body of evidence indicates a differential involvement of dorsal and ventral hippocampal divisions in novelty detection. In this brief review article, we discuss the recent findings of the role of mossy cells in the ventral hippocampal moiety in novelty detection and put them in perspective with other novelty-related pathways in the hippocampus. We propose a mechanism for novelty-driven memory acquisition in the dentate gyrus by the direct projection of ventral mossy cells to dorsal dentate granule cells. By this projection, the ventral hippocampus sends novelty signals to the dorsal hippocampus, opening a gate for memory encoding in dentate granule cells based on information coming from the entorhinal cortex. We conclude that, contrary to the presently accepted functional independence, the dorsal and ventral hippocampi cooperate to link the novelty and contextual information, and this dorso-ventral interaction is crucial for the novelty-dependent memory formation.
Topics: Animals; Dentate Gyrus; Hippocampus; Humans; Mossy Fibers, Hippocampal; Neural Pathways; Neurons; Open Field Test; Recognition, Psychology
PubMed: 34214666
DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2021.107486 -
Frontiers in Neural Circuits 2020Successful memory involves not only remembering over time but also keeping memories distinct. Computational models suggest that pattern separation appears as a highly... (Review)
Review
Successful memory involves not only remembering over time but also keeping memories distinct. Computational models suggest that pattern separation appears as a highly efficient process to discriminate between overlapping memories. Furthermore, lesion studies have shown that the dentate gyrus (DG) participates in pattern separation. However, these manipulations did not allow identifying the neuronal mechanism underlying pattern separation. The development of different neurophotonics techniques, together with other genetic tools, has been useful for the study of the microcircuit involved in this process. It has been shown that less-overlapped information would generate distinct neuronal representations within the granule cells (GCs). However, because glutamatergic or GABAergic cells in the DG are not functionally or structurally homogeneous, identifying the specific role of the different subpopulations remains elusive. Then, understanding pattern separation requires the ability to manipulate a temporal and spatially specific subset of cells in the DG and ideally to analyze DG cells activity in individuals performing a pattern separation dependent behavioral task. Thus, neurophotonics and calcium imaging techniques in conjunction with activity-dependent promoters and high-resolution microscopy appear as important tools for this endeavor. In this work, we review how different neurophotonics techniques have been implemented in the elucidation of a neuronal network that supports pattern separation alone or in combination with traditional techniques. We discuss the limitation of these techniques and how other neurophotonic techniques could be used to complement the advances presented up to this date.
Topics: Animals; Computer Simulation; Dentate Gyrus; GABAergic Neurons; Humans; Memory; Models, Neurological; Molecular Imaging; Nerve Net; Optical Phenomena
PubMed: 32587504
DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2020.00026 -
Journal of Neurochemistry May 2021A comprehensive overview of the interplay between glucocorticoids (GCs) and adult hippocampal neurogenesis (AHN) is presented, particularly, in the context of a... (Review)
Review
A comprehensive overview of the interplay between glucocorticoids (GCs) and adult hippocampal neurogenesis (AHN) is presented, particularly, in the context of a diseased brain. The effectors of GCs in the dentate gyrus neurogenic niche of the hippocampal are reviewed, and the consequences of the GC signaling on the generation and integration of new neurons are discussed. Recent findings demonstrating how GC signaling mediates impairments of the AHN in various brain pathologies are overviewed. GC-mediated effects on the generation and integration of adult-born neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus depend on the nature, severity, and duration of the acting stress factor. GCs realize their effects on the AHN primarily via specific glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors. Disruption of the reciprocal regulation between the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the generation of the adult-born granular neurons is currently considered to be a key mechanism implicating the AHN into the pathogenesis of numerous brain diseases, including those without a direct hippocampal damage. These alterations vary from reduced proliferation of stem and progenitor cells to increased cell death and abnormalities in morphology, connectivity, and localization of young neurons. Although the involvement of the mutual regulation between the HPA axis and the AHN in the pathogenesis of cognitive deficits and mood impairments is evident, several unresolved critical issues are stated. Understanding the details of GC-mediated mechanisms involved in the alterations in AHN could enable the identification of molecular targets for ameliorating pathology-induced imbalance in the HPA axis/AHN mutual regulation to conquer cognitive and psychiatric disturbances.
Topics: Animals; Brain Diseases; Cytoplasmic Granules; Dentate Gyrus; Glucocorticoids; Hippocampus; Humans; Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System; Neurogenesis; Pituitary-Adrenal System
PubMed: 33301616
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.15265 -
Molecular Psychiatry Apr 2024Astrocytes, a major glial cell type in the brain, are indispensable for the integration, maintenance and survival of neurons during development and adulthood. Both life... (Review)
Review
Astrocytes, a major glial cell type in the brain, are indispensable for the integration, maintenance and survival of neurons during development and adulthood. Both life phases make specific demands on the molecular and physiological properties of astrocytes, and most research projects traditionally focus on either developmental or adult astrocyte functions. In most brain regions, the generation of brain cells and the establishment of neural circuits ends with postnatal development. However, few neurogenic niches exist in the adult brain in which new neurons and glial cells are produced lifelong, and the integration of new cells into functional circuits represent a very special form of plasticity. Consequently, in the neurogenic niche, the astrocytes must be equipped to execute both mature and developmental tasks in order to integrate newborn neurons into the circuit and yet maintain overall homeostasis without affecting the preexisting neurons. In this review, we focus on astrocytes of the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG), and discuss specific features of the astrocytic compartment that may allow the execution of both tasks. Firstly, astrocytes of the adult DG are molecularly, morphologically and functionally diverse, and the distinct astrocytes subtypes are characterized by their localization to DG layers. This spatial separation may lead to a functional specification of astrocytes subtypes according to the neuronal structures they are embedded in, hence a division of labor. Secondly, the astrocytic compartment is not static, but steadily increasing in numbers due to lifelong astrogenesis. Interestingly, astrogenesis can adapt to environmental and behavioral stimuli, revealing an unexpected astrocyte dynamic that allows the niche to adopt to changing demands. The diversity and dynamic of astrocytes in the adult DG implicate a vital contribution to hippocampal plasticity and represent an interesting model to uncover mechanisms how astrocytes simultaneously fulfill developmental and adult tasks.
Topics: Astrocytes; Dentate Gyrus; Humans; Animals; Neurogenesis; Neurons; Adult; Neuronal Plasticity
PubMed: 38177351
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-023-02386-4 -
Proceedings of the National Academy of... May 2022Five decades ago, long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission was discovered at entorhinal cortex→dentate gyrus (EC→DG) synapses, but the molecular...
Five decades ago, long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission was discovered at entorhinal cortex→dentate gyrus (EC→DG) synapses, but the molecular determinants of EC→DG LTP remain largely unknown. Here, we show that the presynaptic neurexin–ligand cerebellin-4 (Cbln4) is highly expressed in the entorhinal cortex and essential for LTP at EC→DG synapses, but dispensable for basal synaptic transmission at these synapses. Cbln4, when bound to cell-surface neurexins, forms transcellular complexes by interacting with postsynaptic DCC (deleted in colorectal cancer) or neogenin-1. DCC and neogenin-1 act as netrin and repulsive guidance molecule-a (RGMa) receptors that mediate axon guidance in the developing brain, but their binding to Cbln4 raised the possibility that they might additionally function in the mature brain as postsynaptic receptors for presynaptic neurexin/Cbln4 complexes, and that as such receptors, DCC or neogenin-1 might mediate EC→DG LTP that depends on Cbln4. Indeed, we observed that neogenin-1, but not DCC, is abundantly expressed in dentate gyrus granule cells, and that postsynaptic neogenin-1 deletions in dentate granule cells blocked EC→DG LTP, but again did not affect basal synaptic transmission similar to the presynaptic Cbln4 deletions. Thus, binding of presynaptic Cbln4 to postsynaptic neogenin-1 renders EC→DG synapses competent for LTP, but is not required for establishing these synapses or for otherwise enabling their function.
Topics: Animals; Dentate Gyrus; Ligands; Long-Term Potentiation; Membrane Proteins; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Nerve Tissue Proteins; Netrin Receptors; Protein Precursors; Synapses; Synaptic Transmission
PubMed: 35544694
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2123421119 -
Stem Cell Reports Jul 2023Quiescence is a hallmark of adult neural stem cells (NSCs) in the mammalian brain, and establishment and maintenance of quiescence is essential for life-long continuous...
Quiescence is a hallmark of adult neural stem cells (NSCs) in the mammalian brain, and establishment and maintenance of quiescence is essential for life-long continuous neurogenesis. How NSCs in the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus acquire their quiescence during early postnatal stages and continuously maintain quiescence in adulthood is poorly understood. Here, we show that Hopx-CreER-mediated conditional deletion of Nkcc1, which encodes a chloride importer, in mouse DG NSCs impairs both their quiescence acquisition at early postnatal stages and quiescence maintenance in adulthood. Furthermore, PV-CreER-mediated deletion of Nkcc1 in PV interneurons in the adult mouse brain leads to activation of quiescent DG NSCs, resulting in an expanded NSC pool. Consistently, pharmacological inhibition of NKCC1 promotes NSC proliferation in both early postnatal and adult mouse DG. Together, our study reveals both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous roles of NKCC1 in regulating the acquisition and maintenance of NSC quiescence in the mammalian hippocampus.
Topics: Animals; Mice; Hippocampus; Neural Stem Cells; Neurogenesis; Cell Division; Dentate Gyrus; Mammals
PubMed: 37390823
DOI: 10.1016/j.stemcr.2023.05.021 -
NeuroImage Apr 2024In Alzheimer's disease (AD), early diagnosis facilitates treatment options and leads to beneficial outcomes for patients, their carers and the healthcare system. The...
INTRODUCTION
In Alzheimer's disease (AD), early diagnosis facilitates treatment options and leads to beneficial outcomes for patients, their carers and the healthcare system. The neuropsychological battery of the Uniform Data Set (UDSNB3.0) assesses cognition in ageing and dementia, by measuring scores across different cognitive domains such as attention, memory, processing speed, executive function and language. However, its neuroanatomical correlates have not been investigated using 7 Tesla MRI (7T MRI).
METHODS
We used 7T MRI to investigate the correlations between hippocampal subfield volumes and the UDSNB3.0 in 24 individuals with Amyloidβ-status AD and 18 age-matched controls, with respective age ranges of 60 (42-76) and 62 (52-79) years. AD participants with a Medial Temporal Atrophy scale of higher than 2 on 3T MRI were excluded from the study.
RESULTS
A significant difference in the entire hippocampal volume was observed in the AD group compared to healthy controls (HC), primarily influenced by CA1, the largest hippocampal subfield. Notably, no significant difference in whole brain volume between the groups implied that hippocampal volume loss was not merely reflective of overall brain atrophy. UDSNB3.0 cognitive scores showed significant differences between AD and HC, particularly in Memory, Language, and Visuospatial domains. The volume of the Dentate Gyrus (DG) showed a significant association with the Memory and Executive domain scores in AD patients as assessed by the UDSNB3.0.. The data also suggested a non-significant trend for CA1 volume associated with UDSNB3.0 Memory, Executive, and Language domain scores in AD. In a reassessment focusing on hippocampal subfields and MoCA memory subdomains in AD, associations were observed between the DG and Cued, Uncued, and Recognition Memory subscores, whereas CA1 and Tail showed associations only with Cued memory.
DISCUSSION
This study reveals differences in the hippocampal volumes measured using 7T MRI, between individuals with early symptomatic AD compared with healthy controls. This highlights the potential of 7T MRI as a valuable tool for early AD diagnosis and the real-time monitoring of AD progression and treatment efficacy.
CLINICALTRIALS
GOV: ID NCT04992975 (Clinicaltrial.gov 2023).
Topics: Humans; Alzheimer Disease; Male; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Female; Aged; Dentate Gyrus; Middle Aged; CA1 Region, Hippocampal; Memory Disorders; Adult; Amyloid beta-Peptides
PubMed: 38614372
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120607 -
Nature Neuroscience Oct 2019The dentate gyrus-CA3 circuit of the hippocampus is continuously modified by the integration of adult-born dentate granule cells (abDGCs). All abDGCs undergo a prolonged... (Review)
Review
The dentate gyrus-CA3 circuit of the hippocampus is continuously modified by the integration of adult-born dentate granule cells (abDGCs). All abDGCs undergo a prolonged period of maturation, during which they exhibit heightened synaptic plasticity and refinement of electrophysiological properties and connectivity. Consistent with theoretical models and the known functions of the dentate gyrus-CA3 circuit, acute or chronic manipulations of abDGCs support a role for abDGCs in the regulation of memory interference. In this Review, we integrate insights from studies that examine the maturation of abDGCs and their integration into the circuit with network mechanisms that support memory discrimination, consolidation and clearance. We propose that adult hippocampal neurogenesis enables the generation of a library of experiences, each registered in mature abDGC physiology and connectivity. Mature abDGCs recruit inhibitory microcircuits to support pattern separation and memory indexing.
Topics: Animals; CA3 Region, Hippocampal; Dentate Gyrus; Hippocampus; Humans; Memory; Neurogenesis; Neuronal Plasticity; Neurons
PubMed: 31477897
DOI: 10.1038/s41593-019-0484-2