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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1999, 19(15):6661-6672
Excitotoxic Septal Lesions Result in Spatial Memory Deficits and
Altered Flexibility of Hippocampal Single-Unit Representations
Stefan
Leutgeb and
Sheri J. Y.
Mizumori
Program in Neuroscience and Department of Psychology, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
The septal nuclei are reciprocally connected with the hippocampal
formation and contribute importantly to spatial and memory processing.
Using excitotoxic lesions of the septal area, we investigated whether
neurodegeneration in subcortical projections to hippocampus can
compromise flexible information processing by hippocampal single
units. In agreement with the mild effects of excitotoxic septal
lesions on hippocampal physiology compared with fimbria-fornix lesions
and septal inactivation, we observed limited lesion effects on
single-unit activity. The location specificity of hippocampal complex
spike cells remained unchanged, but a less reliable location-dependent discharge was observed in experimental animals with a pronounced postoperative working memory deficit. Testing in the absence of ambient
illumination and in a new environment revealed that the spatial
correlates of complex spike cells in lesioned animals may rely on a
more limited set of sensory cues. Altered sensory cues resulted in a
significantly different response pattern between the control and lesion
group in the new environment, a situation that normally results in
place field reorganization. Such a group difference was not observed
during dark testing, a condition in which place field reorganization is
less prominent. A contribution of hippocampal interneurons to the
observed alterations in the spatial properties of the principal cells
was suggested by decreased theta modulation in the lesioned group.
Because excitotoxic lesions result in memory deficits that resemble
age-related memory problems in the absence of age-related degenerative
processes, we suggest that septal neurodegeneration could directly
contribute to those behavioral changes with advanced age that correlate
with functional alterations in the hippocampal formation.
Key words:
medial and lateral septum; hippocampus; place cells; spatial working memory; aging; acetylcholine; GABA projection
neurons
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19156661-12$05.00/0
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