Just as hippocampal lesions are principally responsible for “temporal lobe” amnesia, lesions affecting the anterior thalamic nuclei seem principally responsible for a similar loss of memory, “diencephalic” amnesia. Compared with the former, the causes of diencephalic amnesia have remained elusive. A potential clue comes from how the two sites are interconnected, as within the hippocampal formation, only the subiculum has direct, reciprocal connections with the anterior thalamic nuclei. We found that both permanent and reversible anterior thalamic nuclei lesions in male rats cause a cessation of subicular spatial signaling, reduce spatial memory performance to chance, but leave hippocampal CA1 place cells largely unaffected. We suggest that a core element of diencephalic amnesia stems from the information loss in hippocampal output regions following anterior thalamic pathology.
CITATION STYLE
Frost, B. E., Martin, S. K., Cafalchio, M., Islam, M. N., Aggleton, J. P., & O’Mara, S. M. (2021). Anterior thalamic inputs are required for subiculum spatial coding, with associated consequences for hippocampal spatial memory. Journal of Neuroscience, 41(30), 6511–6525. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2868-20.2021
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