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Detecting and discriminating novel objects: The impact of perirhinal cortex disconnection on hippocampal activity patterns

Authors

Kinnavane, Lisa , Amin, Eman , OLARTE SÁNCHEZ, CRISTIAN MANUEL, Aggleton, John

External publication

Si

Means

Hippocampus

Scope

Article

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

SJR Quartile

JCR Impact

3.945

SJR Impact

2.606

Publication date

01/01/2016

ISI

000387590300003

Abstract

Perirhinal cortex provides object-based information and novelty/familiarity information for the hippocampus. The necessity of these inputs was tested by comparing hippocampal c-fos expression in rats with or without perirhinal lesions. These rats either discriminated novel from familiar objects (Novel-Familiar) or explored pairs of novel objects (Novel-Novel). Despite impairing Novel-Familiar discriminations, the perirhinal lesions did not affect novelty detection, as measured by overall object exploration levels (Novel-Novel condition). The perirhinal lesions also largely spared a characteristic network of linked c-fos expression associated with novel stimuli (entorhinal cortex -> CA3 -> distal CA1 -> proximal subiculum). The findings show: I) that perirhinal lesions preserve behavioral sensitivity to novelty, whilst still impairing the spontaneous ability to discriminate novel from familiar objects, II) that the distinctive patterns of hippocampal c-fos activity promoted by novel stimuli do not require perirhinal inputs, III) that entorhinal Fos counts (layers II and III) increase for novelty discriminations, IV) that hippocampal c-fos networks reflect proximal-distal connectivity differences, and V) that discriminating novelty creates different pathway interactions from merely detecting novelty, pointing to top-down effects that help guide object selection. VC 2016 The Authors Hippocampus Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Keywords

entorhinal cortex; hippocampus; nucleus reuniens; prefrontal cortex; recognition memory

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