Literature DB >> 30944479

Object-vector coding in the medial entorhinal cortex.

Emilie Ranheim Skytøen1, Sebastian Ola Andersson1, Øyvind Arne Høydal2, May-Britt Moser1, Edvard I Moser3.   

Abstract

The hippocampus and the medial entorhinal cortex are part of a brain system that maps self-location during navigation in the proximal environment1,2. In this system, correlations between neural firing and an animal's position or orientation are so evident that cell types have been given simple descriptive names, such as place cells3, grid cells4, border cells5,6 and head-direction cells7. While the number of identified functional cell types is growing at a steady rate, insights remain limited by an almost-exclusive reliance on recordings from rodents foraging in empty enclosures that are different from the richly populated, geometrically irregular environments of the natural world. In environments that contain discrete objects, animals are known to store information about distance and direction to those objects and to use this vector information to guide navigation8-10. Theoretical studies have proposed that such vector operations are supported by neurons that use distance and direction from discrete objects11,12 or boundaries13,14 to determine the animal's location, but-although some cells with vector-coding properties may be present in the hippocampus15 and subiculum16,17-it remains to be determined whether and how vectorial operations are implemented in the wider neural representation of space. Here we show that a large fraction of medial entorhinal cortex neurons fire specifically when mice are at given distances and directions from spatially confined objects. These 'object-vector cells' are tuned equally to a spectrum of discrete objects, irrespective of their location in the test arena, as well as to a broad range of dimensions and shapes, from point-like objects to extended surfaces. Our findings point to vector coding as a predominant form of position coding in the medial entorhinal cortex.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30944479     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1077-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  51 in total

1.  Inhibitory Connectivity Dominates the Fan Cell Network in Layer II of Lateral Entorhinal Cortex.

Authors:  Eirik S Nilssen; Bente Jacobsen; Gunhild Fjeld; Rajeevkumar R Nair; Stefan Blankvoort; Clifford Kentros; Menno P Witter
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2018-09-24       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Object and place information processing by CA1 hippocampal neurons of C57BL/6J mice.

Authors:  Herborg N Ásgeirsdóttir; Sarah J Cohen; Robert W Stackman
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2020-02-05       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 3.  Neuronal vector coding in spatial cognition.

Authors:  Andrej Bicanski; Neil Burgess
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2020-08-06       Impact factor: 34.870

4.  The Tolman-Eichenbaum Machine: Unifying Space and Relational Memory through Generalization in the Hippocampal Formation.

Authors:  James C R Whittington; Timothy H Muller; Shirley Mark; Guifen Chen; Caswell Barry; Neil Burgess; Timothy E J Behrens
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 41.582

5.  Entorhinal-retrosplenial circuits for allocentric-egocentric transformation of boundary coding.

Authors:  Joeri Bg van Wijngaarden; Susanne S Babl; Hiroshi T Ito
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 8.140

Review 6.  The medial prefrontal cortex - hippocampus circuit that integrates information of object, place and time to construct episodic memory in rodents: Behavioral, anatomical and neurochemical properties.

Authors:  Owen Y Chao; Maria A de Souza Silva; Yi-Mei Yang; Joseph P Huston
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2020-04-13       Impact factor: 8.989

Review 7.  Dentate gyrus circuits for encoding, retrieval and discrimination of episodic memories.

Authors:  Thomas Hainmueller; Marlene Bartos
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2020-02-10       Impact factor: 34.870

8.  Visual cue-related activity of cells in the medial entorhinal cortex during navigation in virtual reality.

Authors:  Amina A Kinkhabwala; Yi Gu; Dmitriy Aronov; David W Tank
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 8.140

Review 9.  Egocentric and allocentric representations of space in the rodent brain.

Authors:  Cheng Wang; Xiaojing Chen; James J Knierim
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2019-11-30       Impact factor: 6.627

Review 10.  The effects of developmental alcohol exposure on the neurobiology of spatial processing.

Authors:  Ryan E Harvey; Laura E Berkowitz; Derek A Hamilton; Benjamin J Clark
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2019-09-14       Impact factor: 8.989

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