iScience (Apr 2024)

Sleep-dependent engram reactivation during hippocampal memory consolidation associated with subregion-specific biosynthetic changes

  • Lijing Wang,
  • Lauren Park,
  • Weisheng Wu,
  • Dana King,
  • Alexis Vega-Medina,
  • Frank Raven,
  • Jessy Martinez,
  • Amy Ensing,
  • Katherine McDonald,
  • Zhongying Yang,
  • Sha Jiang,
  • Sara J. Aton

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 4
p. 109408

Abstract

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Summary: Post-learning sleep is essential for hippocampal memory processing, including contextual fear memory consolidation. We labeled context-encoding engram neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) and assessed reactivation of these neurons after fear learning. Post-learning sleep deprivation (SD) selectively disrupted reactivation of inferior blade DG engram neurons, linked to SD-induced suppression of neuronal activity in the inferior, but not superior DG blade. Subregion-specific spatial profiling of transcripts revealed that transcriptomic responses to SD differed greatly between hippocampal CA1, CA3, and DG inferior blade, superior blade, and hilus. Activity-driven transcripts, and those associated with cytoskeletal remodeling, were selectively suppressed in the inferior blade. Critically, learning-driven transcriptomic changes differed dramatically between the DG blades and were absent from all other regions. Together, these data suggest that the DG is critical for sleep-dependent memory consolidation, and that the effects of sleep loss on the hippocampus are highly subregion-specific.

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