Layer V perirhinal cortical ensemble activity during object exploration: A comparison between young and aged rats

Object recognition memory requires the perirhinal cortex (PRC) and this cognitive function declines during normal aging. Recent electrophysiological recordings from young rats have shown that neurons in Layer V of the PRC are activated by three‐dimensional objects. Thus, it is possible that age‐rela...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hippocampus 2012-10, Vol.22 (10), p.2080-2093
Hauptverfasser: Burke, S.N., Hartzell, A.L., Lister, J.P., Hoang, L.T., Barnes, C.A.
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container_end_page 2093
container_issue 10
container_start_page 2080
container_title Hippocampus
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creator Burke, S.N.
Hartzell, A.L.
Lister, J.P.
Hoang, L.T.
Barnes, C.A.
description Object recognition memory requires the perirhinal cortex (PRC) and this cognitive function declines during normal aging. Recent electrophysiological recordings from young rats have shown that neurons in Layer V of the PRC are activated by three‐dimensional objects. Thus, it is possible that age‐related object recognition deficits result from alterations in PRC neuron activity in older animals. To examine this, the present study used cellular compartment analysis of temporal activity by fluorescence in situ hybridization (catFISH) with confocal microscopy to monitor cellular distributions of activity‐induced Arc RNA in layer V of the PRC. Activity was monitored during two distinct epochs of object exploration. In one group of rats (6 young/6 aged) animals were placed in a familiar testing arena and allowed to explore five different three‐dimensional objects for two 5‐min sessions separated by a 20‐min rest (AA). The second group of animals (6 young/6 aged) also explored the same objects for two 5‐min sessions, but the environment was changed between the first and the second epoch (AB). Behavioral data showed that both age groups spent less time exploring objects during the second epoch, even when the environment changed, indicating successful recognition. Although the proportion of active neurons between epochs did not change in the AA group, in the AB group more neurons were active during epoch 2 of object exploration. This recruitment of neurons into the active neural ensemble could serve to signal that familiar stimuli are being encountered in a new context. When numbers of Arc positive neurons were compared between age groups, the old rats had significantly lower proportions of Arc‐positive PRC neurons in both the AA and AB behavioral conditions. These data support the hypothesis that age‐associated functional alterations in the PRC contribute to declines in stimulus recognition over the lifespan. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hipo.22066
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Recent electrophysiological recordings from young rats have shown that neurons in Layer V of the PRC are activated by three‐dimensional objects. Thus, it is possible that age‐related object recognition deficits result from alterations in PRC neuron activity in older animals. To examine this, the present study used cellular compartment analysis of temporal activity by fluorescence in situ hybridization (catFISH) with confocal microscopy to monitor cellular distributions of activity‐induced Arc RNA in layer V of the PRC. Activity was monitored during two distinct epochs of object exploration. In one group of rats (6 young/6 aged) animals were placed in a familiar testing arena and allowed to explore five different three‐dimensional objects for two 5‐min sessions separated by a 20‐min rest (AA). The second group of animals (6 young/6 aged) also explored the same objects for two 5‐min sessions, but the environment was changed between the first and the second epoch (AB). Behavioral data showed that both age groups spent less time exploring objects during the second epoch, even when the environment changed, indicating successful recognition. Although the proportion of active neurons between epochs did not change in the AA group, in the AB group more neurons were active during epoch 2 of object exploration. This recruitment of neurons into the active neural ensemble could serve to signal that familiar stimuli are being encountered in a new context. When numbers of Arc positive neurons were compared between age groups, the old rats had significantly lower proportions of Arc‐positive PRC neurons in both the AA and AB behavioral conditions. 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subjects Age Factors
Aging - physiology
Animals
Cerebral Cortex - cytology
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Exploratory Behavior - physiology
immediate-early gene
Maze Learning - physiology
Neurons - physiology
object field
object recognition
rat
Rats
Rats, Inbred F344
Recognition, Psychology - physiology
title Layer V perirhinal cortical ensemble activity during object exploration: A comparison between young and aged rats
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