Hippocampal sharp wave-ripples and the associated sequence replay emerge from structured synaptic interactions in a network model of area CA3

Ecker, András ✉ [Ecker, András (neurobiológia, bi...), author]; Bagi, Bence; Vértes, Eszter; Steinbach-Németh, Orsolya; Karlocai, Maria Rita [Karlócai, Rita (Neurobiológia), author] Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Research (IEM / DCNN); Papp, Orsolya I; Miklós, István [Miklós, István (Bioinformatika), author] Informatics Laboratory; Hájos, Norbert [Hájos, Norbert (Neurobiológia), author] Network Neurophysiology; Institute of Experimental Medicine; Freund, Tamás [Freund, Tamás (Neurobiológia, id...), author] Információs Technológiai és Bionikai Kar (PPCU); Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Research; Institute of Experimental Medicine; Gulyás, Attila I [Gulyás, Attila (Neurobiológia), author] Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Research; Káli, Szabolcs ✉ [Káli, Szabolcs (Elméleti neurobio...), author] Információs Technológiai és Bionikai Kar (PPCU); Laboratory of Cerebral Cortex Research; Institute of Experimental Medicine

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: ELIFE 2050-084X 2050-084X 11 Paper: e71850 , 29 p. 2022
  • SJR Scopus - Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous): D1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • MILAB(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00004) Funder: NRDIO
  • Hungarian Brain Research Program Grant(2017-1.2.1-NKP-2017-00002)
  • Hungarian Scientific Research Fund(K115441) Funder: NKFIH
  • Hungarian Scientific Research Fund(K83251) Funder: NKFIH
  • Hungarian Scientific Research Fund(K85659) Funder: NKFIH
  • Horizon 2020 Framework Programme(720270)
  • Horizon 2020 Framework Programme(785907)
  • European Research Council(ERC-2011-ADG-294313)
  • EU FP7(604102)
Subjects:
  • Biological sciences
Hippocampal place cells are activated sequentially as an animal explores its environment. These activity sequences are internally recreated ('replayed'), either in the same or reversed order, during bursts of activity (sharp wave-ripples [SWRs]) that occur in sleep and awake rest. SWR-associated replay is thought to be critical for the creation and maintenance of long-term memory. In order to identify the cellular and network mechanisms of SWRs and replay, we constructed and simulated a data-driven model of area CA3 of the hippocampus. Our results show that the chain-like structure of recurrent excitatory interactions established during learning not only determines the content of replay, but is essential for the generation of the SWRs as well. We find that bidirectional replay requires the interplay of the experimentally confirmed, temporally symmetric plasticity rule, and cellular adaptation. Our model provides a unifying framework for diverse phenomena involving hippocampal plasticity, representations, and dynamics, and suggests that the structured neural codes induced by learning may have greater influence over cortical network states than previously appreciated.
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2025-04-25 11:47