Frontiers in Neural Circuits (Oct 2013)

Toward a self-wired active reconstruction of the hippocampal trisynaptic loop: DG-CA3

  • Gregory J. Brewer,
  • Gregory J. Brewer,
  • Gregory J. Brewer,
  • Michael D. Boehler,
  • Stathis eLeondopulos,
  • Stathis eLeondopulos,
  • Liangbin ePan,
  • Sankaraleengam eAlagapan,
  • Thomas eDeMarse,
  • Bruce C Wheeler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2013.00165
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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The mammalian hippocampus functions to encode and retrieve memories by transiently changing synaptic strengths, yet encoding in individual subregions for transmission between regions remains poorly understood. Toward the goal of better understanding the coding in the trisynaptic pathway from the dentate gyrus (DG) to the CA3 and CA1, we report a novel microfabricated device that divides a micro-electrode array into two compartments of separate hippocampal network subregions connected by axons that grow through 3x10x400 μm tunnels. Gene expression by qPCR demonstrated selective enrichment of separate DG, CA3 and CA1 subregions. Reconnection of DG to CA3 altered burst dynamics associated with marked enrichment of GAD67 in DG and GFAP in CA3. Surprisingly, DG axon spike propagation was preferentially unidirectional to the CA3 region at 0.5 m/s with little reverse transmission. Therefore, select hippocampal subregions intrinsically self-wire in anatomically appropriate patterns and maintain their distinct subregion phenotype without external inputs

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