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Holistic bursting cells store long-term memory in auditory cortex.

Ruijie LiJunjie HuangLonghui LiZhikai ZhaoSusu LiangShanshan LiangMeng WangXiang LiaoJing LyuZhenqiao ZhouSibo WangWenjun JinHaiyang ChenDamaris HolderHongbang LiuJianxiong ZhangMin LiYuguo TangStefan RemyJanelle M P PakanXiao-Wei ChenHongbo Jia
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The sensory neocortex has been suggested to be a substrate for long-term memory storage, yet which exact single cells could be specific candidates underlying such long-term memory storage remained neither known nor visible for over a century. Here, using a combination of day-by-day two-photon Ca 2+ imaging and targeted single-cell loose-patch recording in an auditory associative learning paradigm with composite sounds in male mice, we reveal sparsely distributed neurons in layer 2/3 of auditory cortex emerged step-wise from quiescence into bursting mode, which then invariably expressed holistic information of the learned composite sounds, referred to as holistic bursting (HB) cells. Notably, it was not shuffled populations but the same sparse HB cells that embodied the behavioral relevance of the learned composite sounds, pinpointing HB cells as physiologically-defined single-cell candidates of an engram underlying long-term memory storage in auditory cortex.
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