Paz Rony, Bauer Elizabeth P, Paré Denis
Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience, Rutgers State University, Newark, New Jersey 07102, USA.
J Neurosci. 2007 Jun 13;27(24):6542-51. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1077-07.2007.
Much data suggests that hippocampal-medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) interactions support memory consolidation. This process is thought to involve the gradual transfer of transient hippocampal-dependent memories to distributed neocortical sites for long-term storage. However, hippocampal projections to the neocortex involve a multisynaptic pathway that sequentially progresses through the entorhinal and perirhinal regions before reaching the neocortex. Similarly, the mPFC influences the hippocampus via the rhinal cortices, suggesting that the rhinal cortices occupy a strategic position in this network. The present study thus tested the idea that the mPFC supports memory by facilitating the transfer of hippocampal activity to the neocortex via an enhancement of entorhinal to perirhinal communication. To this end, we simultaneously recorded mPFC, perirhinal, and entorhinal neurons during the acquisition of a trace-conditioning task in which a visual conditioned stimulus (CS) was followed by a delay period after which a liquid reward was administered. At learning onset, correlated perirhinal-entorhinal firing increased in relation to mPFC activity, but with no preferential directionality, and only after reward delivery. However, as learning progressed across days, mPFC activity gradually enhanced rhinal correlations in relation to the CS as well, and did so in a specific direction: from entorhinal to perirhinal neurons. This suggests that, at late stages of learning, mPFC activity facilitates entorhinal to perirhinal communication. Because this connection is a necessary step for the transfer of hippocampal activity to the neocortex, our results suggest that the mPFC is involved in the slow iterative process supporting the integration of hippocampal-dependent memories into neocortical networks.
大量数据表明,海马体与内侧前额叶皮质(mPFC)之间的相互作用有助于记忆巩固。这一过程被认为涉及将短暂的海马体依赖性记忆逐渐转移至分布在新皮质的区域进行长期存储。然而,海马体向新皮质的投射涉及一条多突触通路,该通路在到达新皮质之前会依次经过内嗅区和嗅周区。同样,mPFC通过嗅觉皮质影响海马体,这表明嗅觉皮质在该网络中占据关键位置。因此,本研究检验了这样一种观点,即mPFC通过增强内嗅区与嗅周区之间的交流,促进海马体活动向新皮质的转移,从而支持记忆。为此,我们在一项痕迹条件反射任务的习得过程中,同时记录了mPFC、嗅周区和内嗅区的神经元活动。在该任务中,视觉条件刺激(CS)之后会有一段延迟期,之后给予液体奖励。在学习开始时,嗅周区与内嗅区的相关放电活动随着mPFC活动的增加而增加,但没有优先方向性,且仅在奖励发放后出现。然而,随着学习在数天内的进展,mPFC活动也逐渐增强了与CS相关的嗅觉相关性,并且是沿特定方向增强:从内嗅区神经元到嗅周区神经元。这表明,在学习后期,mPFC活动促进了内嗅区到嗅周区的交流。由于这种连接是海马体活动向新皮质转移的必要步骤,我们的结果表明,mPFC参与了支持将海马体依赖性记忆整合到新皮质网络中的缓慢迭代过程。