| Literature DB >> 29186681 |
John B Trimper1, Claire R Galloway1, Andrew C Jones2, Kaavya Mandi2, Joseph R Manns3.
Abstract
Neuronal oscillations in the rat hippocampus relate to both memory and locomotion, raising the question of how these cognitive and behavioral correlates interact to determine the oscillatory network state of this region. Here, rats freely locomoted while performing an object-location task designed to test hippocampus-dependent spatial associative memory. Rhythmic activity in theta, beta, slow gamma, and fast gamma frequency ranges were observed in both action potentials and local field potentials (LFPs) across four main hippocampal subregions. Several patterns of LFP oscillations corresponded to overt behavior (e.g., increased dentate gyrus-CA3 beta coherence during stationary moments and CA1-subiculum theta coherence during locomotion). In comparison, slow gamma (∼40 Hz) oscillations throughout the hippocampus related most specifically to object-location associative memory encoding rather than overt behavior. The results help to untangle how hippocampal oscillations relate to both memory and motion and single out slow gamma oscillations as a distinguishing correlate of spatial associative memory.Entities:
Keywords: CA1; CA3; dentate gyrus; electrophysiology; gamma oscillations; hippocampus; memory; object; subiculum; synchrony
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29186681 PMCID: PMC5728687 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2017.10.123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423