Graduate School of Brain Science, Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan.
Adv Neurobiol. 2024;41:39-61. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-69188-1_2.
The hippocampus, which is deeply involved in episodic memory, plays a pivotal role in spatial navigation, an essential animal behavior. Spatial navigation requires the calculation of the distance and direction from a current to the final position, i.e., a vector to a goal. Place cells in the mammalian hippocampus maximally increase their firing rates when the animal passes a particular location and then encode the animal's current location. The entorhinal cortex, one synapse upstream of the hippocampus, contains both grid and head direction cells that encode distance and direction information, respectively. However, the question of whether the hippocampus generates a vector for goal-directed navigation during the integration of distance and direction to the destination remains unclear. Mounting evidence of the cell types involved in spatial navigation has been obtained mainly in mammalian model animals such as rats and mice. Recent advances in wireless and miniaturized neural activity monitoring devices have begun to yield results not only in model organisms but also in wild mammals, birds, fish, and insects. A scrutiny of the literature examining neural correlates of spatial navigation across multiple animal species reveals that few place cells or grid cells have been found, but that head direction cells are commonly present in multiple animal species. Exceptionally, rodent-like place cells were only found in the medial pallium of tufted titmice, a food-caching bird. The medial pallium is an avian brain region homologous to the mammalian hippocampus. By contrast, rodent-like head direction cells are found in the medial pallium of quails. Head direction cells are also found in the medial pallium of streaked shearwaters, a migratory bird. The avian hippocampus contains information about the animal's current location or direction, but the neural encoding may differ depending on the ecological characteristics of the bird species. The place cells of bats, which are mammals, fly in three-dimensional space and encode vectorial information toward the goal. Training rats with an ingenious task that required them to choose a direction for each run in a maze suggested that place cells encode a vector for goal-directed spatial navigation. Thus, the scrutiny of the literature on spatial navigation-related neuronal activity across multiple animal species suggests that depending on a combination of external conditions such as the context in which the animal is situated (e.g., the context or the framework composed of landmarks in the environment) and internal conditions such as the ecological and behavioral characteristics of the animal, hippocampal neurons can be identified as place cells or head direction cells. We thus propose a conjecture that primitively, the hippocampus, or its homolog, contains information about the travel direction and that the emergence of the hippocampus during evolution has enabled the generation of vector information to the goal for advanced spatial navigation such as the search for the shortcut path and episodic memory capacity.
海马体在情景记忆中起着至关重要的作用,在空间导航中也起着关键作用,空间导航是一种基本的动物行为。空间导航需要计算从当前位置到最终位置的距离和方向,即到目标的向量。哺乳动物海马体中的位置细胞在动物经过特定位置时最大程度地增加其放电率,然后对动物的当前位置进行编码。海马体上游的一个突触——内嗅皮层包含网格细胞和头部方向细胞,分别编码距离和方向信息。然而,海马体是否在整合距离和方向到目的地的过程中产生用于目标导向导航的向量,这个问题仍然不清楚。涉及空间导航的细胞类型的大量证据主要在大鼠和小鼠等哺乳动物模型动物中获得。最近,无线和微型化神经活动监测设备的进步不仅在模型生物中,而且在野生哺乳动物、鸟类、鱼类和昆虫中也开始产生结果。对跨多种动物物种的空间导航神经相关物的文献进行审查表明,很少发现位置细胞或网格细胞,但头部方向细胞在多种动物物种中普遍存在。例外的是,类似啮齿动物的位置细胞仅在丛冠山雀的内侧神经叶中发现,这是一种食虫鸟类。内侧神经叶是与哺乳动物海马体同源的鸟类大脑区域。相比之下,类似啮齿动物的头部方向细胞存在于鹌鹑的内侧神经叶中。头部方向细胞也存在于条纹剪水鹱的内侧神经叶中,这是一种迁徙鸟类。鸟类的海马体包含有关动物当前位置或方向的信息,但神经编码可能因鸟类物种的生态特征而异。蝙蝠是哺乳动物,它们的位置细胞在三维空间中飞行,并编码朝向目标的向量信息。通过一项巧妙的任务训练大鼠,要求它们在迷宫中的每一次奔跑中选择一个方向,这表明位置细胞编码了目标导向空间导航的向量。因此,对跨多种动物物种的空间导航相关神经元活动的文献进行审查表明,取决于外部条件(例如,动物所处的环境背景或环境中地标组成的框架)和内部条件(例如,动物的生态和行为特征)的组合,海马体神经元可以被识别为位置细胞或头部方向细胞。因此,我们提出了一个假设,即原始的海马体或其同源物包含有关行进方向的信息,而海马体在进化过程中的出现使生成目标向量信息成为可能,例如寻找捷径和情景记忆能力。