Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Psychology, J. P. Scott Center for Neuroscience, Mind and Behavior, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403, USA.
Horm Behav. 2024 Jan;157:105451. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2023.105451. Epub 2023 Nov 16.
Although the hippocampus is one of the most-studied brain regions in mammals, research on the avian hippocampus has been more limited in scope. It is generally agreed that the hippocampus is an ancient feature of the amniote brain, and therefore homologous between the two lineages. Because birds and mammals are evolutionarily not very closely related, any shared anatomy is likely to be crucial for shared functions of their hippocampi. These functions, in turn, are likely to be essential if they have been conserved for over 300 million years. Therefore, research on the avian hippocampus can help us understand how this brain region evolved and how it has changed over evolutionary time. Further, there is a strong research foundation in birds on hippocampal-supported behaviors such as spatial navigation, food caching, and brood parasitism that scientists can build upon to better understand how hippocampal anatomy, network circuitry, endocrinology, and physiology can help control these behaviors. In this review, we summarize our current understanding of the avian hippocampus in spatial cognition as well as in regulating anxiety, approach-avoidance behavior, and stress responses. Although there are still some questions about the exact number of subdivisions in the avian hippocampus and how that might vary in different avian families, there is intriguing evidence that the avian hippocampus might have complementary functional profiles along the rostral-caudal axis similar to the dorsal-ventral axis of the rodent hippocampus, where the rostral/dorsal hippocampus is more involved in cognitive processes like spatial learning and the caudal/ventral hippocampus regulates emotional states, anxiety, and the stress response. Future research should focus on elucidating the cellular and molecular mechanisms - including endocrinological - in the avian hippocampus that underlie behaviors such as spatial navigation, spatial memory, and anxiety-related behaviors, and in so doing, resolve outstanding questions about avian hippocampal function and organization.
尽管海马体是哺乳动物中研究最多的脑区之一,但鸟类海马体的研究范围更为有限。人们普遍认为,海马体是羊膜动物大脑的古老特征,因此在这两个谱系中是同源的。由于鸟类和哺乳动物在进化上没有非常密切的关系,任何共同的解剖结构都可能是它们海马体共同功能的关键。反过来,如果这些功能已经被保留了 3 亿多年,那么它们很可能是必不可少的。因此,对鸟类海马体的研究可以帮助我们了解这个脑区是如何进化的,以及它在进化过程中是如何变化的。此外,鸟类在海马体支持的行为方面有很强的研究基础,如空间导航、食物藏匿和巢寄生,科学家可以在此基础上更好地理解海马体解剖结构、网络电路、内分泌学和生理学如何帮助控制这些行为。在这篇综述中,我们总结了我们目前对鸟类海马体在空间认知以及调节焦虑、接近回避行为和应激反应方面的理解。尽管关于鸟类海马体的确切细分数量以及不同鸟类家族中可能存在的差异仍存在一些问题,但有一些有趣的证据表明,鸟类海马体可能沿着前后轴具有互补的功能特征,类似于啮齿动物海马体的背腹轴,其中前/背海马体更参与认知过程,如空间学习,而后/腹海马体调节情绪状态、焦虑和应激反应。未来的研究应集中于阐明鸟类海马体中的细胞和分子机制——包括内分泌学——这些机制是空间导航、空间记忆和与焦虑相关行为等行为的基础,从而解决关于鸟类海马体功能和组织的悬而未决的问题。