A prefrontal-thalamo-hippocampal circuit for goal-directed spatial navigation.

Nature

Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience and Centre for Neural Computation, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Olav Kyrres gate 9, MTFS, 7491 Trondheim, Norway.

Published: June 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Spatial navigation relies on understanding the relationship between where we currently are and where we want to go, and hippocampal neurons seem to track both current position and future paths.
  • A new study identifies a neural circuit involving the medial prefrontal cortex and the nucleus reuniens of the thalamus that's vital for the hippocampus to represent routes through an environment in rats.
  • Disabling the nucleus reuniens significantly diminished the neurons' ability in the CA1 region of the hippocampus to reflect trajectory information, indicating that this thalamic area is crucial for communication in the brain's navigation networks.

Article Abstract

Spatial navigation requires information about the relationship between current and future positions. The activity of hippocampal neurons appears to reflect such a relationship, representing not only instantaneous position but also the path towards a goal location. However, how the hippocampus obtains information about goal direction is poorly understood. Here we report a prefrontal-thalamic neural circuit that is required for hippocampal representation of routes or trajectories through the environment. Trajectory-dependent firing was observed in medial prefrontal cortex, the nucleus reuniens of the thalamus, and the CA1 region of the hippocampus in rats. Lesioning or optogenetic silencing of the nucleus reuniens substantially reduced trajectory-dependent CA1 firing. Trajectory-dependent activity was almost absent in CA3, which does not receive nucleus reuniens input. The data suggest that projections from medial prefrontal cortex, via the nucleus reuniens, are crucial for representation of the future path during goal-directed behaviour and point to the thalamus as a key node in networks for long-range communication between cortical regions involved in navigation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature14396DOI Listing

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