Reactivation of encoding ensembles in the prelimbic cortex supports temporal associations.
Thays Brenner SantosCesar Augusto de Oliveira CoelhoJuliana Carlota Kramer-SoaresPaul W FranklandMaria Gabriela Menezes OliveiraPublished in: Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (2024)
Fear conditioning is encoded by strengthening synaptic connections between the neurons activated by a conditioned stimulus (CS) and those activated by an unconditioned stimulus (US), forming a memory engram, which is reactivated during memory retrieval. In temporal associations, activity within the prelimbic cortex (PL) plays a role in sustaining a short-term, transient memory of the CS, which is associated with the US after a temporal gap. However, it is unknown whether the PL has only a temporary role, transiently representing the CS, or is part of the neuronal ensembles that support the retrieval, i.e., whether PL neurons support both transient, short-term memories and stable, long-term memories. We investigated neuronal ensembles underlying temporal associations using fear conditioning with a 5-s interval between the CS and US (CFC-5s). Controls were trained in contextual fear conditioning (CFC), in which the CS-US overlaps. We used Robust Activity Marking (RAM) to selectively manipulate PL neurons activated by CFC-5s learning and Targeted Recombination in Active Populations (TRAP2) mice to label neurons activated by CFC-5s learning and reactivated by memory retrieval in the amygdala, medial prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, perirhinal cortices (PER) and subiculum. We also computed their co-reactivation to generate correlation-based networks. The optogenetic reactivation or silencing of PL encoding ensembles either promoted or impaired the retrieval of CFC-5s but not CFC. CFC-5s retrieval reactivated encoding ensembles in the PL, PER, and basolateral amygdala. The engram network of CFC-5s had higher amygdala and PER centralities and interconnectivity. The same PL neurons support learning and stable associative memories.
Keyphrases
- prefrontal cortex
- spinal cord
- working memory
- functional connectivity
- cerebral ischemia
- dna damage
- type diabetes
- blood brain barrier
- spinal cord injury
- metabolic syndrome
- resting state
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- high resolution
- high intensity
- high fat diet induced
- mass spectrometry
- diffusion weighted imaging
- stress induced