Literature DB >> 19144850

Head direction cell instability in the anterior dorsal thalamus after lesions of the interpeduncular nucleus.

Benjamin J Clark1, Asha Sarma, Jeffrey S Taube.   

Abstract

Previous research has identified a population of cells throughout the limbic system that discharge as a function of the animal's head direction (HD). Altering normal motor cues can alter the HD cell responses and disrupt the updating of their preferred firing directions, thus suggesting that motor cues contribute to processing the HD signal. A pathway that conveys motor information may stem from the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN), a brain region that has reciprocal connections with HD cell circuitry. To test this hypothesis, we produced electrolytic or neurotoxic lesions of the IPN and recorded HD cells in the anterior dorsal thalamus (ADN) of rats. Direction-specific firing remained present in the ADN after lesions of the IPN, but measures of HD cell properties showed that cells had reduced peak firing rates, large directional firing ranges, and firing that predicted the animal's future heading more than in intact controls. Furthermore, preferred firing directions were moderately less influenced by rotation of a salient visual landmark. Finally, the preferred directions of cells in lesioned rats exhibited large shifts when the animals foraged for scattered food pellets in a darkened environment and when locomoting from a familiar environment to a novel one. We propose that the IPN contributes motor information about the animal's movements to the HD cell circuitry. Furthermore, these results suggest that the IPN plays a broad role in the discharge properties and stability of direction-specific activity in the HD cell circuit.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19144850      PMCID: PMC2768376          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2811-08.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  66 in total

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Authors:  H T Blair; J Cho; P E Sharp
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  18 in total

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7.  Anticipatory Neural Activity Improves the Decoding Accuracy for Dynamic Head-Direction Signals.

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9.  Deficits in landmark navigation and path integration after lesions of the interpeduncular nucleus.

Authors:  Benjamin J Clark; Jeffrey S Taube
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10.  Visual cue-related activity of cells in the medial entorhinal cortex during navigation in virtual reality.

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