| Literature DB >> 23678110 |
Christine E Wells1, Doran P Amos, Ali Jeewajee, Vincent Douchamps, John Rodgers, John O'Keefe, Neil Burgess, Colin Lever.
Abstract
Hippocampal processing is strongly implicated in both spatial cognition and anxiety and is temporally organized by the theta rhythm. However, there has been little attempt to understand how each type of processing relates to the other in behaving animals, despite their common substrate. In freely moving rats, there is a broadly linear relationship between hippocampal theta frequency and running speed over the normal range of speeds used during foraging. A recent model predicts that spatial-translation-related and arousal/anxiety-related mechanisms of hippocampal theta generation underlie dissociable aspects of the theta frequency-running speed relationship (the slope and intercept, respectively). Here we provide the first confirmatory evidence: environmental novelty decreases slope, whereas anxiolytic drugs reduce intercept. Variation in slope predicted changes in spatial representation by CA1 place cells and novelty-responsive behavior. Variation in intercept predicted anxiety-like behavior. Our findings isolate and doubly dissociate two components of theta generation that operate in parallel in behaving animals and link them to anxiolytic drug action, novelty, and the metric for self-motion.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23678110 PMCID: PMC3715395 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5040-12.2013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167