Adult-born granule cells facilitate remapping of spatial and non-spatial representations in the dentate gyrus

Neuron. 2023 Dec 20;111(24):4024-4039.e7. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2023.09.016. Epub 2023 Oct 10.

Abstract

Adult-born granule cells (abGCs) have been implicated in memory discrimination through a neural computation known as pattern separation. Here, using in vivo Ca2+ imaging, we examined how chronic ablation or acute chemogenetic silencing of abGCs affects the activity of mature granule cells (mGCs). In both cases, we observed altered remapping of mGCs. Rather than broadly modulating the activity of all mGCs, abGCs promote the remapping of place cells' firing fields while increasing rate remapping of mGCs that represent sensory cues. In turn, these remapping deficits are associated with behavioral impairments in animals' ability to correctly identify new goal locations. Thus, abGCs facilitate pattern separation through the formation of non-overlapping representations for identical sensory cues encountered in different locations. In the absence of abGCs, the dentate gyrus shifts to a state that is dominated by cue information, a situation that is consistent with the overgeneralization often observed in anxiety or age-related disorders.

Keywords: adult neurogenesis; dentate gyrus; in vivo two-photon Ca(2+) imaging; pattern separation.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cues
  • Dentate Gyrus*
  • Neurogenesis*
  • Neurons