Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Retrosplenial inputs drive diverse visual representations in the medial entorhinal cortex

View through CrossRef
Abstract The ability of rodents to use visual cues for successful navigation and goal-directed behavior has been long appreciated, although the neural mechanisms supporting sensory representations in navigational circuits are largely unknown. Navigation is fundamentally dependent on the hippocampus and closely connected entorhinal cortex, whose neurons exhibit characteristic firing patterns corresponding to the animal’s location. The medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) receives direct projections from sensory areas in the neocortex, suggesting the ability to encode sensory information. To examine this possibility, we performed high-density recordings of MEC neurons in awake, head-fixed mice presented with simple visual stimuli and assessed the dynamics of sensory-evoked activity. We found a large fraction of neurons exhibited robust responses to visual input that shaped activity relative to ongoing network dynamics. Visually responsive cells could be separated into subgroups based on functional and molecular properties within deep layers of the dorsal MEC, suggesting diverse populations within the MEC contribute to sensory encoding. We then showed that optogenetic suppression of retrosplenial cortex afferents within the MEC strongly reduced visual responses. Overall, our results demonstrate the the MEC can encode simple visual cues in the environment that can contribute to neural representations of location necessary for accurate navigation.
Title: Retrosplenial inputs drive diverse visual representations in the medial entorhinal cortex
Description:
Abstract The ability of rodents to use visual cues for successful navigation and goal-directed behavior has been long appreciated, although the neural mechanisms supporting sensory representations in navigational circuits are largely unknown.
Navigation is fundamentally dependent on the hippocampus and closely connected entorhinal cortex, whose neurons exhibit characteristic firing patterns corresponding to the animal’s location.
The medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) receives direct projections from sensory areas in the neocortex, suggesting the ability to encode sensory information.
To examine this possibility, we performed high-density recordings of MEC neurons in awake, head-fixed mice presented with simple visual stimuli and assessed the dynamics of sensory-evoked activity.
We found a large fraction of neurons exhibited robust responses to visual input that shaped activity relative to ongoing network dynamics.
Visually responsive cells could be separated into subgroups based on functional and molecular properties within deep layers of the dorsal MEC, suggesting diverse populations within the MEC contribute to sensory encoding.
We then showed that optogenetic suppression of retrosplenial cortex afferents within the MEC strongly reduced visual responses.
Overall, our results demonstrate the the MEC can encode simple visual cues in the environment that can contribute to neural representations of location necessary for accurate navigation.

Related Results

The human entorhinal cortex: A cytoarchitectonic analysis
The human entorhinal cortex: A cytoarchitectonic analysis
AbstractThe entorhinal cortex of man is in the medial aspect of the temporal lobe. As in other mammalian species, it constitutes an essential component of the hippocampal formation...
Acute stress modulates hippocampal to entorhinal cortex communication
Acute stress modulates hippocampal to entorhinal cortex communication
Feed-forward inhibition is vital in the transfer and processing of synaptic information within the hippocampal–entorhinal loop by controlling the strength and direction of excitati...
Inside-Out Repair of Medial Meniscal Ramp Lesions in Patients Undergoing Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Inside-Out Repair of Medial Meniscal Ramp Lesions in Patients Undergoing Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
Background: Medial meniscal ramp lesions are disruptions at the meniscocapsular junction and/or meniscotibial attachment of the posterior horn of the medial meniscus, a...
Phase of neuronal activity encodes 2-dimensional space in the human entorhinal cortex
Phase of neuronal activity encodes 2-dimensional space in the human entorhinal cortex
AbstractThe entorhinal cortex plays a vital role in our spatial awareness. Much focus has been placed on the spatial activity of its individual neurons, which fire in a grid-like p...
Thalamocingulate Connections in the Monkey
Thalamocingulate Connections in the Monkey
Abstract All cortical areas make massive reciprocal connections with the dorsal thalamic nuclei and because the great majority of subcortical inputs to the cortex or...
The Medial Temporal Lobe Supports Mnemonic Discrimination For Event Duration
The Medial Temporal Lobe Supports Mnemonic Discrimination For Event Duration
AbstractTime has an integral role in episodic memory and previous work has implicated the medial temporal lobe in both representing time and discriminating between similar memory t...

Back to Top