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Functional Diversity of Subicular Principal Cells during Hippocampal Ripples.

Claudia BöhmYangfan PengNikolaus MaierJochen WintererJames F A PouletJörg R P GeigerDietmar Schmitz
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
Memory consolidation is dependent on hippocampal activity patterns, so called hippocampal ripples. During these fast oscillations, memory traces are transferred from the hippocampus to the neocortex via the subiculum. We investigated the role of single cells in the subiculum during ripples and found that, dependent on their subtype, they are preferentially activated or inhibited. In addition, these two subtypes, the bursting and regular firing type, are differentially integrated into the local network: inhibitory cells are more densely connected to regular firing cells, and communication between regular and bursting cells is unidirectional. Together with earlier findings on different preferential target regions of these subtypes, we conclude that memory traces are guided to target regions of the activated cell type.
Keyphrases
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