Publication | Open Access
A Sparse, Spatially Biased Subtype of Mature Granule Cell Dominates Recruitment in Hippocampal-Associated Behaviors
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Citations
71
References
2020
Year
NeuropsychologyDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain MechanismSubtype PrevalenceCell ParticipationCellular NeurobiologySocial SciencesMemoryCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBrain StructureBehavioral NeuroscienceCortical RemodelingCell BiologySynaptic PlasticityNeurobiological MechanismDevelopmental BiologyHippocampal-associated BehaviorsNeuroscienceMedicineGranule Cells
Animals can store information about experiences by activating specific neuronal populations, and subsequent reactivation of these neural ensembles can lead to recall of salient experiences. In the hippocampus, granule cells of the dentate gyrus participate in such memory engrams; however, whether there is an underlying logic to granule cell participation has not been examined. Here, we find that a range of novel experiences preferentially activates granule cells of the suprapyramidal blade relative to the infrapyramidal blade. Motivated by this, we identify a suprapyramidal-blade-enriched population of granule cells with distinct spatial, morphological, physiological, and developmental properties. Via transcriptomics, we map these traits onto a sparse and discrete granule cell subtype that is recruited at a 10-fold greater frequency than expected by subtype prevalence, constituting the majority of all recruited granule cells. Thus, in behaviors known to involve hippocampal-dependent memory formation, a rare and spatially localized subtype dominates overall granule cell recruitment.
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