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Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injury leads to cellular and circuit changes in the dentate gyrus, a gateway to hippocampal information processing. Intrinsic granule cell firing properties and strong feedback inhibition in the dentate are proposed as critical to its ability to generate unique representation of simi...

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Autores principales: Corrubia, Lucas, Huang, Andrew, Nguyen, Susan, Shiflett, Michael W., Jones, Mathew V., Ewell, Laura A., Santhakumar, Vijayalakshmi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37745454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.22.546120
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author Corrubia, Lucas
Huang, Andrew
Nguyen, Susan
Shiflett, Michael W.
Jones, Mathew V.
Ewell, Laura A.
Santhakumar, Vijayalakshmi
author_facet Corrubia, Lucas
Huang, Andrew
Nguyen, Susan
Shiflett, Michael W.
Jones, Mathew V.
Ewell, Laura A.
Santhakumar, Vijayalakshmi
author_sort Corrubia, Lucas
collection PubMed
description Traumatic brain injury leads to cellular and circuit changes in the dentate gyrus, a gateway to hippocampal information processing. Intrinsic granule cell firing properties and strong feedback inhibition in the dentate are proposed as critical to its ability to generate unique representation of similar inputs by a process known as pattern separation. Here we evaluate the impact of brain injury on cellular decorrelation of temporally patterned inputs in slices and behavioral discrimination of spatial locations in vivo one week after concussive lateral fluid percussion injury (FPI) in mice. Despite posttraumatic increases in perforant path evoked excitatory drive to granule cells and enhanced ΔFosB labeling, indicating sustained increase in excitability, the reliability of granule cell spiking was not compromised after FPI. Although granule cells continued to effectively decorrelate output spike trains recorded in response to similar temporally patterned input sets after FPI, their ability to decorrelate highly similar input patterns was reduced. In parallel, encoding of similar spatial locations in a novel object location task that involves the dentate inhibitory circuits was impaired one week after FPI. Injury induced changes in pattern separation were accompanied by loss of somatostatin expressing inhibitory neurons in the hilus. Together, these data suggest that the early posttraumatic changes in the dentate circuit undermine dentate circuit decorrelation of temporal input patterns as well as behavioral discrimination of similar spatial locations, both of which could contribute to deficits in episodic memory.
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spelling pubmed-105157702023-09-23 Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury Corrubia, Lucas Huang, Andrew Nguyen, Susan Shiflett, Michael W. Jones, Mathew V. Ewell, Laura A. Santhakumar, Vijayalakshmi bioRxiv Article Traumatic brain injury leads to cellular and circuit changes in the dentate gyrus, a gateway to hippocampal information processing. Intrinsic granule cell firing properties and strong feedback inhibition in the dentate are proposed as critical to its ability to generate unique representation of similar inputs by a process known as pattern separation. Here we evaluate the impact of brain injury on cellular decorrelation of temporally patterned inputs in slices and behavioral discrimination of spatial locations in vivo one week after concussive lateral fluid percussion injury (FPI) in mice. Despite posttraumatic increases in perforant path evoked excitatory drive to granule cells and enhanced ΔFosB labeling, indicating sustained increase in excitability, the reliability of granule cell spiking was not compromised after FPI. Although granule cells continued to effectively decorrelate output spike trains recorded in response to similar temporally patterned input sets after FPI, their ability to decorrelate highly similar input patterns was reduced. In parallel, encoding of similar spatial locations in a novel object location task that involves the dentate inhibitory circuits was impaired one week after FPI. Injury induced changes in pattern separation were accompanied by loss of somatostatin expressing inhibitory neurons in the hilus. Together, these data suggest that the early posttraumatic changes in the dentate circuit undermine dentate circuit decorrelation of temporal input patterns as well as behavioral discrimination of similar spatial locations, both of which could contribute to deficits in episodic memory. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10515770/ /pubmed/37745454 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.22.546120 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Corrubia, Lucas
Huang, Andrew
Nguyen, Susan
Shiflett, Michael W.
Jones, Mathew V.
Ewell, Laura A.
Santhakumar, Vijayalakshmi
Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title_full Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title_fullStr Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title_full_unstemmed Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title_short Early Deficits in Dentate Circuit and Behavioral Pattern Separation after Concussive Brain Injury
title_sort early deficits in dentate circuit and behavioral pattern separation after concussive brain injury
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10515770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37745454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.06.22.546120
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