Department of Psychology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2012 Mar;97(3):326-31. doi: 10.1016/j.nlm.2012.02.005. Epub 2012 Feb 27.
The hippocampus (HPP) plays a known role in learning novel spatial information. More specifically, the dentate gyrus (DG) hippocampal subregion is thought to support pattern separation, a mechanism for encoding and separating spatially similar events into distinct representations. Several studies have shown that lesions of the dorsal DG (dDG) in rodents result in inefficient spatial pattern separation for working memory; however, it is unclear whether selective dDG lesions disrupt spatial pattern separation for reference memory. Therefore, the current study investigated the role of the dDG in pattern separation using a spatial reference memory paradigm to determine whether the dDG is necessary for acquiring spatial discriminations for adjacent locations. Male Long-Evans rats were randomly assigned to receive bilateral intracranial infusions of colchicine or saline (control) into the dDG. Following recovery from surgery, each rat was pseudo-randomly assigned to an adjacent arm or separate arm condition and subsequently tested on a place-learning task using an eight-arm radial maze. Rats were trained to discriminate between a rewarded arm and a nonrewarded arm that were either adjacent to one another or separated by a distance of two arm positions. Each rat received 10 trials per day and was tested until the animal reached a criterion of nine correct choices out of 10 consecutive trials across 2 consecutive days of testing. Both groups acquired spatial discriminations for the separate condition at similar rates. However, in the adjacent condition, dDG lesioned animals required significantly more trials to reach the learning criterion than controls. The results suggest that dDG lesions decrease efficiency in pattern separation resulting in impairments in the adjacent condition involving greater overlap among the distal cues. Conversely, in the separate condition, there was less overlap among distal cues during encoding and less need for pattern separation. These findings provide further support for a critical role for the dDG in spatial pattern separation by demonstrating the importance of a processing mechanism that is capable of reducing interference among overlapping spatial inputs across a variety of memory demands.
海马体(HPP)在学习新的空间信息方面起着已知的作用。更具体地说,齿状回(DG)海马亚区被认为支持模式分离,这是一种编码和分离空间相似事件的机制,形成独特的表示。几项研究表明,啮齿动物背侧 DG(dDG)的损伤会导致工作记忆的空间模式分离效率低下;然而,尚不清楚选择性 dDG 损伤是否会破坏参考记忆的空间模式分离。因此,目前的研究使用空间参考记忆范式研究了 dDG 在模式分离中的作用,以确定 dDG 是否有必要获取相邻位置的空间辨别力。雄性 Long-Evans 大鼠被随机分配接受双侧脑室内注入 colchicine 或生理盐水(对照)到 dDG。手术后恢复后,每只大鼠被伪随机分配到相邻臂或分离臂条件,并随后在八臂放射状迷宫上进行位置学习任务测试。大鼠被训练区分奖励臂和非奖励臂,奖励臂和非奖励臂要么彼此相邻,要么相隔两个臂位。每只大鼠每天接受 10 次试验,并且在 2 天的测试中,动物连续 10 次正确选择达到标准后,即可结束测试。两组大鼠在分开条件下获得空间辨别力的速度相似。然而,在相邻条件下,dDG 损伤动物达到学习标准所需的试验次数明显多于对照组。结果表明,dDG 损伤降低了模式分离的效率,导致在涉及远端线索之间重叠更大的相邻条件下出现损伤。相反,在分离条件下,在编码过程中远端线索之间的重叠较少,因此不需要模式分离。这些发现通过证明能够减少各种记忆需求下重叠空间输入之间干扰的处理机制的重要性,进一步支持了 dDG 在空间模式分离中的关键作用。