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Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory

Several experiments have demonstrated an intimate relationship between hippocampal theta rhythm (4–12 Hz) and memory. Lesioning the medial septum or fimbria-fornix, a fiber track connecting the hippocampus and the medial septum, abolishes the theta rhythm and results in a severe impairment in declar...

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Autores principales: Lipponen, Arto, Woldemichael, Bisrat T., Gurevicius, Kestutis, Tanila, Heikki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3486864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23133638
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048506
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author Lipponen, Arto
Woldemichael, Bisrat T.
Gurevicius, Kestutis
Tanila, Heikki
author_facet Lipponen, Arto
Woldemichael, Bisrat T.
Gurevicius, Kestutis
Tanila, Heikki
author_sort Lipponen, Arto
collection PubMed
description Several experiments have demonstrated an intimate relationship between hippocampal theta rhythm (4–12 Hz) and memory. Lesioning the medial septum or fimbria-fornix, a fiber track connecting the hippocampus and the medial septum, abolishes the theta rhythm and results in a severe impairment in declarative memory. To assess whether there is a causal relationship between hippocampal theta and memory formation we investigated whether restoration of hippocampal theta by electrical stimulation during the encoding phase also restores fimbria-fornix lesion induced memory deficit in rats in the fear conditioning paradigm. Male Wistar rats underwent sham or fimbria-fornix lesion operation. Stimulation electrodes were implanted in the ventral hippocampal commissure and recording electrodes in the septal hippocampus. Artificial theta stimulation of 8 Hz was delivered during 3-min free exploration of the test cage in half of the rats before aversive conditioning with three foot shocks during 2 min. Memory was assessed by total freezing time in the same environment 24 h and 28 h after fear conditioning, and in an intervening test session in a different context. As expected, fimbria-fornix lesion impaired fear memory and dramatically attenuated hippocampal theta power. Artificial theta stimulation produced continuous theta oscillations that were almost similar to endogenous theta rhythm in amplitude and frequency. However, contrary to our predictions, artificial theta stimulation impaired conditioned fear response in both sham and fimbria-fornix lesioned animals. These data suggest that restoration of theta oscillation per se is not sufficient to support memory encoding after fimbria-fornix lesion and that universal theta oscillation in the hippocampus with a fixed frequency may actually impair memory.
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spelling pubmed-34868642012-11-06 Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory Lipponen, Arto Woldemichael, Bisrat T. Gurevicius, Kestutis Tanila, Heikki PLoS One Research Article Several experiments have demonstrated an intimate relationship between hippocampal theta rhythm (4–12 Hz) and memory. Lesioning the medial septum or fimbria-fornix, a fiber track connecting the hippocampus and the medial septum, abolishes the theta rhythm and results in a severe impairment in declarative memory. To assess whether there is a causal relationship between hippocampal theta and memory formation we investigated whether restoration of hippocampal theta by electrical stimulation during the encoding phase also restores fimbria-fornix lesion induced memory deficit in rats in the fear conditioning paradigm. Male Wistar rats underwent sham or fimbria-fornix lesion operation. Stimulation electrodes were implanted in the ventral hippocampal commissure and recording electrodes in the septal hippocampus. Artificial theta stimulation of 8 Hz was delivered during 3-min free exploration of the test cage in half of the rats before aversive conditioning with three foot shocks during 2 min. Memory was assessed by total freezing time in the same environment 24 h and 28 h after fear conditioning, and in an intervening test session in a different context. As expected, fimbria-fornix lesion impaired fear memory and dramatically attenuated hippocampal theta power. Artificial theta stimulation produced continuous theta oscillations that were almost similar to endogenous theta rhythm in amplitude and frequency. However, contrary to our predictions, artificial theta stimulation impaired conditioned fear response in both sham and fimbria-fornix lesioned animals. These data suggest that restoration of theta oscillation per se is not sufficient to support memory encoding after fimbria-fornix lesion and that universal theta oscillation in the hippocampus with a fixed frequency may actually impair memory. Public Library of Science 2012-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3486864/ /pubmed/23133638 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048506 Text en © 2012 Lipponen et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lipponen, Arto
Woldemichael, Bisrat T.
Gurevicius, Kestutis
Tanila, Heikki
Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title_full Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title_fullStr Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title_full_unstemmed Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title_short Artificial Theta Stimulation Impairs Encoding of Contextual Fear Memory
title_sort artificial theta stimulation impairs encoding of contextual fear memory
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3486864/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23133638
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048506
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