Mably Alexandra J, Gereke Brian J, Jones Dylan T, Colgin Laura Lee
Center for Learning and Memory, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, 78712.
Department of Neuroscience, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, 78712.
Hippocampus. 2017 Apr;27(4):378-392. doi: 10.1002/hipo.22697. Epub 2017 Jan 16.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an irreversible and highly progressive neurodegenerative disease. Clinically, patients with AD display impairments in episodic and spatial memory. However, the underlying neuronal dysfunctions that result in these impairments remain poorly understood. The hippocampus is crucial for spatial and episodic memory, and thus we tested the hypothesis that abnormal neuronal representations of space in the hippocampus contribute to memory deficits in AD. To test this hypothesis, we recorded spikes from place cells in hippocampal subfield CA1, together with corresponding rhythmic activity in local field potentials, in the 3xTg AD mouse model. We observed disturbances in place cell firing patterns, many of which were consistent with place cell disturbances reported in other rodent models of AD. We found place cell representations of space to be unstable in 3xTg mice compared to control mice. Furthermore, coordination of place cell firing by hippocampal rhythms was disrupted in 3xTg mice. Specifically, a smaller proportion of place cells from 3xTg mice were significantly phase-locked to theta and slow gamma rhythms, and the theta and slow gamma phases at which spikes occurred were also altered. Remarkably, these disturbances were observed at an age before detectable Aβ pathology had developed. Consistencies between these findings in 3xTg mice and previous findings from other AD models suggest that disturbances in place cell firing and hippocampal rhythms are related to AD rather than reflecting peculiarities inherent to a particular transgenic model. Thus, disturbed rhythmic organization of place cell activity may contribute to unstable spatial representations, and related spatial memory deficits, in AD. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是一种不可逆且高度进展性的神经退行性疾病。临床上,AD患者在情景记忆和空间记忆方面表现出障碍。然而,导致这些障碍的潜在神经元功能障碍仍知之甚少。海马体对于空间和情景记忆至关重要,因此我们检验了这样一种假设,即海马体中空间的异常神经元表征导致了AD患者的记忆缺陷。为了验证这一假设,我们在3xTg AD小鼠模型中记录了海马体CA1亚区位置细胞的放电,以及局部场电位中的相应节律活动。我们观察到位置细胞放电模式存在紊乱,其中许多与其他AD啮齿动物模型中报道的位置细胞紊乱一致。我们发现,与对照小鼠相比,3xTg小鼠中空间的位置细胞表征不稳定。此外,3xTg小鼠中海马体节律对位置细胞放电的协调被破坏。具体而言,3xTg小鼠中较小比例的位置细胞与theta和慢γ节律显著锁相,并且放电发生时的theta和慢γ相位也发生了改变。值得注意的是,这些紊乱在可检测到的Aβ病理出现之前的年龄就已观察到。3xTg小鼠的这些发现与其他AD模型先前的发现一致,表明位置细胞放电和海马体节律的紊乱与AD相关,而非反映特定转基因模型固有的特殊性。因此,位置细胞活动的节律组织紊乱可能导致AD中不稳定的空间表征及相关的空间记忆缺陷。© 2017威利期刊公司