A shift in the mechanisms controlling hippocampal engram formation during brain maturation
Author(s) -
Adam I. Ramsaran,
Ying Wang,
Ali Golbabaei,
Stepan Aleshin,
Mitchell L. De Snoo,
Bi-ru Amy Yeung,
Asim J. Rashid,
Ankit Awasthi,
Jocelyn Lau,
Lina Tran,
Sangyoon Y. Ko,
Andrin Abegg,
Lana Chunan Duan,
Cory McKenzie,
Julia Gallucci,
Moriam Ahmed,
Rahul Kaushik,
Alexander Dityatev,
Sheena A. Josselyn,
Paul W. Frankland
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.ade6530
Subject(s) - engram , neuroscience , hippocampus , hippocampal formation , episodic memory , parvalbumin , perineuronal net , psychology , long term memory , memory formation , cognition
The ability to form precise, episodic memories develops with age, with young children only able to form gist-like memories that lack precision. The cellular and molecular events in the developing hippocampus that underlie the emergence of precise, episodic-like memory are unclear. In mice, the absence of a competitive neuronal engram allocation process in the immature hippocampus precluded the formation of sparse engrams and precise memories until the fourth postnatal week, when inhibitory circuits in the hippocampus mature. This age-dependent shift in precision of episodic-like memories involved the functional maturation of parvalbumin-expressing interneurons in subfield CA1 through assembly of extracellular perineuronal nets, which is necessary and sufficient for the onset of competitive neuronal allocation, sparse engram formation, and memory precision.
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