Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Sep 2018)

Comparing Mouse and Rat Hippocampal Place Cell Activities and Firing Sequences in the Same Environments

  • Xiang Mou,
  • Jingheng Cheng,
  • Yan S. W. Yu,
  • Sara E. Kee,
  • Sara E. Kee,
  • Daoyun Ji,
  • Daoyun Ji

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2018.00332
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Hippocampal place cells are key to spatial representation and spatial memory processing. They fire at specific locations in a space (place fields) and fire in precise patterns during theta sequences and during ripple-associated replay events. These phenomena have been extensively studied in rats, but to a less extent in mice. The availability of versatile genetic manipulations gives mice an advantage for place cell studies. However, it is unknown how place fields and place cell sequences in the same environment differ between mice and rats. Here, we provide a quantitative comparison in place field properties, as well as theta sequences and replays, between rats and mice as they ran on the same novel track and as they rested afterwards. We found that place cells in mice display less spatial specificity with more but smaller place fields. Theta oscillations, theta phase precession and aspects of theta sequences in mice are similar as those in rats. The ripple-associated replay, however, is relatively rare during stopping on the novel track in mice. The replay is present during resting after the track running, but is weaker in mice than the replay in rats. Our results suggest that place cells in mice and rats are qualitatively similar, but with substantial quantitative differences.

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