Arc-Expressing Neuronal Ensembles Supporting Pattern Separation Require Adrenergic Activity in Anterior Piriform Cortex: An Exploration of Neural Constraints on Learning.
Amin M D ShakhawatAli GheidiIain T MacIntyreMelissa L WalshCarolyn W HarleyQi YuanPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
We show for the first time that adrenoceptors in anterior piriform cortex (aPC) must be engaged for adult rats to learn to discriminate highly similar odors. Loss of adrenergic activation in olfactory bulb (OB) slows, but does not prevent, discrimination learning. Both increased stability of the rewarded odor representation and increased pattern separation of the rewarded and unrewarded odors in aPC accompany successful discrimination. In the OB, rewarded odors increase in ensemble stability, but there is no evidence of pattern separation. We suggest that the slow acquisition of similar odor discriminations is related to the differing plasticity requirements for increased stability and pattern separation.