Nature Communications (May 2024)

Multiplexed representation of others in the hippocampal CA1 subfield of female mice

  • Xiang Zhang,
  • Qichen Cao,
  • Kai Gao,
  • Cong Chen,
  • Sihui Cheng,
  • Ang Li,
  • Yuqian Zhou,
  • Ruojin Liu,
  • Jun Hao,
  • Emilio Kropff,
  • Chenglin Miao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-47453-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Hippocampal place cells represent the position of a rodent within an environment. In addition, recent experiments show that the CA1 subfield of a passive observer also represents the position of a conspecific performing a spatial task. However, whether this representation is allocentric, egocentric or mixed is less clear. In this study we investigated the representation of others during free behavior and in a task where female mice learned to follow a conspecific for a reward. We found that most cells represent the position of others relative to self-position (social-vector cells) rather than to the environment, with a prevalence of purely egocentric coding modulated by context and mouse identity. Learning of a pursuit task improved the tuning of social-vector cells, but their number remained invariant. Collectively, our results suggest that the hippocampus flexibly codes the position of others in multiple coordinate systems, albeit favoring the self as a reference point.