Sakairi Tomomi, Kawabata Masanori, Rios Alain, Sakai Yutaka, Isomura Yoshikazu
Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8519, Japan.
Brain Science Institute, Tamagawa University, Tokyo 194-8610, Japan.
J Neurosci. 2025 Jun 18;45(25):e0080252025. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0080-25.2025.
Hippocampal sharp-wave ripples (SWRs) are intermittent, fast synchronous oscillations that play a pivotal role in memory formation. It has been well established that SWRs occur during "consummatory behaviors," e.g., eating or drinking a reward for correct action. However, most of typical behavioral experiments using freely moving rodents have not rigorously distinguished between the act of eating/drinking (regardless of consummation or consumption) from stopping locomotion (immobility). Therefore, in this study, we investigated the occurrence of SWRs during a reward-seeking action and subsequent consummatory reward licking in constantly immobile rats (male and female) maintained under head fixation and body covering. Immobile rats performed a pedal hold-release action that was rewarded with water every other time (false and true consummation). Unexpectedly, the SWRs remarkably decreased during reward licking as well as pedal release action. Untrained rats also showed a similar SWR decrease during water licking. Conversely, SWRs gradually increased during the pedal hold period, which was enhanced by reward expectation. A cluster of hippocampal neurons responded to cue/pedal release and reward, as previously shown. Some other clusters exhibited spike activity changes similar to the SWR occurrence, i.e., decreasing during the pedal release action and reward licking, and enhanced by reward expectation during pedal hold period. These task event-responsive neurons and SWR-like neurons displayed stronger spiking synchrony with SWRs than task-unrelated neurons. These findings suggest that the hippocampus generates SWRs, which may associate action with outcome, in "relative immobility" (action pauses) rather than specific consummation or consumption.
海马体尖波涟漪(SWRs)是间歇性的快速同步振荡,在记忆形成中起关键作用。已经明确的是,SWRs在“ consummatory行为”期间出现,例如,因正确行为而进食或饮水获得奖励。然而,大多数使用自由活动啮齿动物的典型行为实验并未严格区分进食/饮水行为(无论是否完成或消耗)与停止运动(静止不动)。因此,在本研究中,我们调查了在头部固定和身体覆盖条件下保持持续静止的大鼠(雄性和雌性)在寻求奖励行为及随后的奖励舔舐过程中SWRs的发生情况。静止的大鼠执行踏板保持-释放动作,每隔一次动作会得到水作为奖励(假完成和真完成)。出乎意料的是,在奖励舔舐以及踏板释放动作期间,SWRs显著减少。未经训练的大鼠在舔水期间也表现出类似的SWRs减少。相反,在踏板保持期间SWRs逐渐增加,奖励预期会增强这种增加。如先前所示,一群海马神经元对提示/踏板释放和奖励有反应。其他一些神经元簇表现出与SWRs发生类似的尖峰活动变化,即在踏板释放动作和奖励舔舐期间减少,在踏板保持期间因奖励预期而增强。这些任务事件反应性神经元和SWR样神经元与SWRs的尖峰同步性比与任务无关的神经元更强。这些发现表明,海马体在“相对静止”(动作暂停)而非特定的完成或消耗过程中产生SWRs,SWRs可能将动作与结果联系起来。