Literature DB >> 32285544

Small lesions of the dorsal or ventral hippocampus subregions are associated with distinct impairments in working memory and reference memory retrieval, and combining them attenuates the acquisition rate of spatial reference memory.

Jonas Hauser1, Luis H Llano López2,3, Joram Feldon1, Pascual A Gargiulo2, Benjamin K Yee4.   

Abstract

The importance of the hippocampus in spatial learning is well established, but the precise relative contributions by the dorsal (septal) and ventral (temporal) subregions remain unresolved. One debate revolves around the extent to which the ventral hippocampus contributes to spatial navigation and learning. Here, separate small subtotal lesions of dorsal hippocampus or ventral hippocampus alone (destroying 18.9 and 28.5% of total hippocampal volume, respectively) spared reference memory acquisition in the water maze. By contrast, combining the two subtotal lesions significantly reduced the rate of acquisition across days. This constitutes evidence for synergistic integration between dorsal and ventral hippocampus in mice. Evidence that ventral hippocampus contributes to spatial/navigation learning also emerged early on during the retention probe test as search preference was reduced in mice with ventral lesions alone or combined lesions. The small ventral lesions also led to anxiolysis in the elevated plus maze and over-generalization of the conditioned freezing response to a neutral context. Similar effects of comparable magnitudes were seen in mice with combined lesions, suggesting that they were largely due to the small ventral damage. By contrast, small dorsal lesions were uniquely associated with a severe spatial working memory deficit in the water maze. Taken together, both dorsal and ventral poles of the hippocampus contribute to efficient spatial navigation in mice: While the integrity of dorsal hippocampus is necessary for spatial working memory, the acquisition and retrieval of spatial reference memory are modulated by the ventral hippocampus. Although the impairments following ventral damage (alone or in combination with dorsal damage) were less substantial, a wider spectrum of spatial learning, including context conditioning, was implicated. Our results encourage the search for integrative mechanism between dorsal and ventral hippocampus in spatial learning. Candidate neural substrates may include dorsoventral longitudinal connections and reciprocal modulation via overlapping polysynaptic networks beyond hippocampus.
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anxiety; hippocampal; learning; spatial memory; water maze

Year:  2020        PMID: 32285544     DOI: 10.1002/hipo.23207

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hippocampus        ISSN: 1050-9631            Impact factor:   3.899


  5 in total

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Authors:  Maria A Samara; George D Oikonomou; George Trompoukis; Georgia Madarou; Maria Adamopoulou; Costas Papatheodoropoulos
Journal:  Brain Neurosci Adv       Date:  2022-06-24

Review 2.  The Sedentary Lifestyle and Masticatory Dysfunction: Time to Review the Contribution to Age-Associated Cognitive Decline and Astrocyte Morphotypes in the Dentate Gyrus.

Authors:  Fabíola de Carvalho Chaves de Siqueira Mendes; Marina Negrão Frota de Almeida; Manoela Falsoni; Marcia Lorena Ferreira Andrade; André Pinheiro Gurgel Felício; Luisa Taynah Vasconcelos Barbosa da Paixão; Fábio Leite do Amaral Júnior; Daniel Clive Anthony; Dora Brites; Cristovam Wanderley Picanço Diniz; Marcia Consentino Kronka Sosthenes
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-06-06       Impact factor: 6.208

3.  Hippocampal Sclerosis in Pilocarpine Epilepsy: Survival of Peptide-Containing Neurons and Learning and Memory Disturbances in the Adult NMRI Strain Mouse.

Authors:  Adrienne Mátyás; Emőke Borbély; András Mihály
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-12-24       Impact factor: 5.923

4.  Altered Functional Connectivity of Insular Subregions in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

Authors:  Dongsheng Zhang; Man Wang; Jie Gao; Yang Huang; Fei Qi; Yumeng Lei; Kai Ai; Xuejiao Yan; Miao Cheng; Yu Su; Xiaoyan Lei; Xiaoling Zhang
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2021-06-16       Impact factor: 4.677

5.  Developmental, cellular, and behavioral phenotypes in a mouse model of congenital hypoplasia of the dentate gyrus.

Authors:  Amir Rattner; Chantelle E Terrillion; Claudia Jou; Tina Kleven; Shun Felix Hu; John Williams; Zhipeng Hou; Manisha Aggarwal; Susumu Mori; Gloria Shin; Loyal A Goff; Menno P Witter; Mikhail Pletnikov; André A Fenton; Jeremy Nathans
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-10-21       Impact factor: 8.140

  5 in total

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