A Visual-Cue-Dependent Memory Circuit for Place Navigation

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Abstract

The ability to remember and to navigate to safe places is necessary for survival. Place navigation is known to involve medial entorhinal cortex (MEC)-hippocampal connections. However, learning-dependent changes in neuronal activity in the distinct circuits remain unknown. Here, by using optic fiber photometry in freely behaving mice, we discovered the experience-dependent induction of a persistent-task-associated (PTA) activity. This PTA activity critically depends on learned visual cues and builds up selectively in the MEC layer II-dentate gyrus, but not in the MEC layer III-CA1 pathway, and its optogenetic suppression disrupts navigation to the target location. The findings suggest that the visual system, the MEC layer II, and the dentate gyrus are essential hubs of a memory circuit for visually guided navigation. Qin et al. identify a persistent-task-associated activity selectively in the medial entorhinal cortex layer II-hippocampal dentate gyrus pathway in freely moving mice after place learning. They find that this activity is required for navigation to the learned place.

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Qin, H., Fu, L., Hu, B., Liao, X., Lu, J., He, W., … Chen, X. (2018). A Visual-Cue-Dependent Memory Circuit for Place Navigation. Neuron, 99(1), 47-55.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2018.05.021

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