Article

The medial entorhinal cortex is necessary for the stimulus control over hippocampal place fields by distal, but not proximal, landmarks

Details

Citation

Allison EAMA, Moore JW, Arkell D, Thomas J, Dudchenko PA & Wood ER (2023) The medial entorhinal cortex is necessary for the stimulus control over hippocampal place fields by distal, but not proximal, landmarks. Hippocampus, 33 (7), pp. 811-829. https://doi.org/10.1002/hipo.23506

Abstract
A fundamental property of place cells in the hippocampus is the anchoring of their firing fields to salient landmarks within the environment. However, it is unclear how such information reaches the hippocampus. In the current experiment, we tested the hypothesis that the stimulus control exerted by distal visual landmarks requires input from the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC). Place cells were recorded from mice with ibotenic acid lesions of the MEC (n = 7) and from sham-lesioned mice (n = 6) following 90° rotations of either distal landmarks or proximal cues in a cue- controlled environment. We found that lesions of the MEC impaired the anchoring of place fields to distal landmarks, but not proximal cues. We also observed that, relative to sham-lesioned mice, place cells in animals with MEC lesions exhibited significantly reduced spatial information and increased sparsity. These results support the view that distal landmark information reaches the hippocampus via the MEC, but that proximal cue information can do so via an alternative neural pathway.

Keywords
CA1; landmarks; learning; medial entorhinal cortex; stimulus control

Journal
Hippocampus: Volume 33, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2023
Publication date online28/02/2023
Date accepted by journal17/01/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/35595
PublisherWiley
ISSN1050-9631
eISSN1098-1063

People (1)

People

Professor Paul Dudchenko

Professor Paul Dudchenko

Professor, Psychology