AI Article Synopsis

  • Locus coeruleus (LC) neurons, responsible for norepinephrine release in the hippocampus, are primarily activated by novel stimuli and changes in the environment, leading to a hypothesis that their activation resets neural networks.
  • Research involving male rats demonstrated that phasic (burst) activation of the LC prior to placing them in familiar or novel environments can reset hippocampal maps, while silencing the LC prevents this reset and maintains familiar maps in certain hippocampal regions.
  • The findings emphasize that phasic LC activity is crucial for encoding new experiences and updating memory, while tonic activation alone does not activate changes in network representations, indicating the importance of activation patterns for neural function.

Article Abstract

Locus coeruleus (LC) neurons, the source of hippocampal norepinephrine (NE), are activated by novelty and changes in environmental contingencies. Based on the role of monoamines in reconfiguring invertebrate networks, and data from mammalian systems, a network reset hypothesis for the effects of LC activation has been proposed. We used the cellular compartmental analysis of temporal FISH technique based on the cellular distribution of immediate early genes to examine the effect of LC activation and inactivation, on regional hippocampal maps in male rats, when LC activity was manipulated just before placement in a second familiar (A/A) and/or novel environment (A/B). We found that bilateral phasic, but not tonic, activation of LC reset hippocampal maps in the A/A condition, whereas silencing the LC with clonidine before placement in the A/B condition blocked map reset and a familiar map emerged in the dentate gyrus, proximal and distal CA1, and CA3c. However, CA3a and CA3b encoded the novel environment. These results support a role for phasic LC responses in generating novel hippocampal sequences during memory encoding and, potentially, memory updating. The silencing experiments suggest that novel environments may not be recognized as different by dentate gyrus and CA1 without LC input. The functional distinction between phasic and tonic LC activity argues that these parameters are critical for determining network changes. These data are consistent with the hippocampus activating internal network representations to encode novel experiential episodes and suggest LC input is critical for this role. Burst activation of the broadly projecting novelty signaling system of the locus coeruleus initiates new network representations throughout the hippocampus despite unchanged external environments. Tonic activation does not alter network representations in the same condition. This suggests differences in the temporal parameters of neuromodulator network activation are critical for neuromodulator function. Silencing this novelty signaling system prevented the appearance of new network representations in a novel environment. Instead, familiar representations were expressed in a subset of hippocampal areas, with another subset encoding the novel environment. This "being in two places at once" argues for independent functional regions within the hippocampus. These experiments strengthen the view that internal states are major determinants of the brain's construction of environmental representations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6335751PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1956-18.2018DOI Listing

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