Taube J S
Department of Psychology, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755.
J Neurosci. 1995 Jan;15(1 Pt 1):70-86. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.15-01-00070.1995.
Previous studies have identified neurons in the postsubiculum which discharge as a function of the animal's head direction in the horizontal plane, independent of its behavior and location in the environment. Anatomical studies have shown that the postsubiculum contains reciprocal connections with the anterior thalamic nuclei (ATN). In order to determine how the head direction (HD) cell signal is processed in the brain, single-unit recordings were monitored in the ATN of freely moving rats in order to characterize their behavioral and spatial correlates. Animals were trained to retrieve food pellets thrown randomly into a cylindrical apparatus containing a single orientation cue. Single unit recordings in the ATN showed that approximately 60% of the recorded cells discharged in relation to the animal's head direction in the horizontal plane. Observation of the animal and quantitative analyses showed that HD cell firing was not dependent on the animal's behavior, trunk position, linear speed, angular head velocity, or location in the environment. Most of these cells were localized to the anterior dorsal thalamic nucleus. Each HD cell contained only one head direction at which the cell discharged maximally and the firing rate decreased linearly away from this preferred direction. The preferred firing directions from all cells recorded were distributed over a 360 degrees range. Quantitative analysis showed that these cells contained similar discharge parameters (peak firing rate, directional firing range) to values reported previously for postsubicular HD cells (Taube et al., 1990a). Experiments involving rotation of the orientation cue showed that the preferred firing direction could be controlled by a salient visual cue. In contrast to postsubicular HD cells, passive rotation of a restrained animal showed that most ATN HD cells ceased discharging when the animal's head was oriented in the preferred direction. These findings demonstrate the presence of HD cells in the ATN and indicate the potential importance of this area for spatial navigation. The origin of the head direction signal is discussed and it is concluded that because of the presence of reciprocal connections between the postsubiculum and the ATN, further studies are required in order to determine the direction in which this head-directional information is flowing. Finally, ATN HD cells differ from postsubicular HD cells by appearing to require volitional motoric input.
以往的研究已经确定,后扣带回中的神经元会根据动物在水平面内的头部方向放电,而与动物的行为及其在环境中的位置无关。解剖学研究表明,后扣带回与丘脑前核(ATN)存在相互连接。为了确定头部方向(HD)细胞信号在大脑中是如何被处理的,研究人员对自由活动大鼠的ATN进行了单单位记录,以描述其行为和空间相关性。动物被训练去取回随机扔进一个装有单一方向线索的圆柱形装置中的食物颗粒。ATN中的单单位记录显示,大约60%的记录细胞相对于动物在水平面内的头部方向放电。对动物的观察和定量分析表明,HD细胞的放电并不依赖于动物的行为、躯干位置、线速度、头部角速度或其在环境中的位置。这些细胞中的大多数位于丘脑前背核。每个HD细胞在放电最大化时只包含一个头部方向,并且放电率从这个偏好方向线性下降。所有记录细胞的偏好放电方向分布在360度范围内。定量分析表明,这些细胞的放电参数(峰值放电率、定向放电范围)与先前报道的后扣带回HD细胞的值相似(Taube等人,1990a)。涉及旋转方向线索的实验表明,偏好放电方向可以由一个显著的视觉线索控制。与后扣带回HD细胞不同的是,对一只被束缚动物的被动旋转表明,当动物的头部朝向偏好方向时,大多数ATN HD细胞停止放电。这些发现证明了ATN中存在HD细胞,并表明该区域在空间导航中的潜在重要性。本文讨论了头部方向信号的起源,并得出结论,由于后扣带回和ATN之间存在相互连接,需要进一步研究以确定这种头部方向信息的流动方向。最后,ATN HD细胞与后扣带回HD细胞的不同之处在于,它们似乎需要意志性运动输入。