Journal article

Hippocampus–prefrontal coupling regulates recognition memory for novelty discrimination

C Wang, TM Furlong, PG Stratton, CCY Lee, L Xu, S Merlin, C Nolan, E Arabzadeh, R Marek, P Sah

Journal of Neuroscience | SOC NEUROSCIENCE | Published : 2021

Abstract

Recognition memory provides the ability to distinguish familiar from novel objects and places, and is important for recording and updating events to guide appropriate behavior. The hippocampus (HPC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) have both been implicated in recognition memory, but the nature of HPC–mPFC interactions, and its impact on local circuits in mediating this process is not known. Here we show that novelty discrimination is accompanied with higher theta activity (4–10 Hz) and increased c-Fos expression in both these regions. Moreover, theta oscillations were highly coupled between the HPC and mPFC during recognition memory retrieval for novelty discrimination, with the HPC lead..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work is supported by grants from the Australian National Health and Research Council and by Australian Research Council Grant CE140100007. We thank J. Lynch, A. Woodruff, R. Tweedale, and P. Sedlak for comments on the manuscript. We also thank R. Sullivan for the protocol and help in immunohistology. In addition, we thank the Queensland Brain Institute for support in viral expression imaging using LSM 510 and Axio Imagers Blue at the Advanced Microscopy Facility.