This is a preprint.
Voltage imaging reveals that hippocampal interneurons tune memory-encoding pyramidal sequences
- PMID: 37163029
- PMCID: PMC10168205
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.04.25.538286
Voltage imaging reveals that hippocampal interneurons tune memory-encoding pyramidal sequences
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Voltage imaging reveals hippocampal inhibitory dynamics shaping pyramidal memory-encoding sequences.Nat Neurosci. 2025 Sep;28(9):1946-1958. doi: 10.1038/s41593-025-02016-y. Epub 2025 Jul 22. Nat Neurosci. 2025. PMID: 40696029 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Hippocampal spiking sequences encode and link behavioral information across time. How inhibition sculpts these sequences remains unknown. We performed longitudinal voltage imaging of CA1 parvalbumin- and somatostatin-expressing interneurons in mice during an odor-cued working memory task, before and after training. During this task, pyramidal odor-specific sequences encode the cue throughout a delay period. In contrast, most interneurons encoded odor delivery, but not odor identity, nor delay time. Population inhibition was stable across days, with constant field turnover, though some cells retained odor-responses for days. At odor onset, a brief, synchronous burst of parvalbumin cells was followed by widespread membrane hyperpolarization and then rebound theta-paced spiking, synchronized across cells. Two-photon calcium imaging revealed that most pyramidal cells were suppressed throughout the odor. Positive pyramidal odor-responses coincided with interneuronal rebound spiking; otherwise, they had weak odor-selectivity. Therefore, inhibition increases the signal-to-noise ratio of cue representations, which is crucial for entraining downstream targets.
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