Differences in reward biased spatial representations in the lateral septum and hippocampus

The lateral septum (LS), which is innervated by the hippocampus, is known to represent spatial information. However, the details of place representation in the LS, and whether this place information is combined with reward signaling, remains unknown. We simultaneously recorded from rat CA1 and caudo...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2020-05, Vol.9, Article 55252
Hauptverfasser: Wirtshafter, Hannah S., Wilson, Matthew A.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The lateral septum (LS), which is innervated by the hippocampus, is known to represent spatial information. However, the details of place representation in the LS, and whether this place information is combined with reward signaling, remains unknown. We simultaneously recorded from rat CA1 and caudodorsal lateral septum in rat during a rewarded navigation task and compared spatial firing in the two areas. While LS place cells are less numerous than in hippocampus, they are similar to the hippocampus in field size and number of fields per cell, but with field shape and center distributions that are more skewed toward reward. Spike crosscorrelations between the hippocampus and LS are greatest for cells that have reward-proximate place fields, suggesting a role for the LS in relaying task-relevant hippocampal spatial information to downstream areas, such as the VTA.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.55252