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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1999, 19(15):6673-6683
The Anterior Thalamic Head-Direction Signal Is Abolished by
Bilateral But Not Unilateral Lesions of the Lateral Mammillary
Nucleus
Hugh T.
Blair1,
Jeiwon
Cho2, and
Patricia E.
Sharp2
1 Center for Neural Science, New York University, New
York, New York 10003, and 2 Department of Psychology, Yale
University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520
Head-direction (HD) cells are neurons that signal a rat's
directional heading in the horizontal plane. Evidence suggests that the
lateral mammillary nucleus (LMN) may play an important role in
generating the HD signal. Here, we examined the role of LMN in the HD
circuit by comparing the effects of unilateral and bilateral LMN
lesions on the activity of HD cells in the anterodorsal thalamus (AD).
HD cells were recorded from AD in freely behaving rats. In the middle
of the recording session, the rat received either bilateral or
unilateral lesions of LMN. Immediately after the lesion, we continued
recording the same HD cell in AD that had been recorded before the
lesion. Additional cells were recorded from lesioned animals for up to
3 weeks after the lesion.
We found that bilateral lesions of LMN permanently abolish HD cells in
AD. After bilateral lesions, AD exhibits unusual rhythmic oscillations
and velocity-correlated spike activity. Unilateral lesions of LMN did
not abolish HD cells in AD. After unilateral lesions, the firing
properties of HD cells in AD become more similar to those of HD cells
in the intact hemisphere of LMN. We discuss the implications of these
findings for understanding the role of LMN in the HD circuit.
Key words:
lateral mammillary nucleus; anterior thalamus; head-direction cell; navigation; path integration; single-unit
recording
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/19156673-11$05.00/0
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