National Research, Development & Innovation Office (NRDIO) - Hungary(K132735)
New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology(ÚNKP-18-5)
New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology(ÚNKP-19-4)
New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology(ÚNKP-20-5)
Throughout life animals inevitably encounter unforeseen threatening events. Activity
of principal cells in the hippocampus is tuned for locations and for salient stimuli
in the animals’ environment thus forming a map known to be pivotal for guiding behavior.
Here, we explored if a code of threatening stimuli exists in the CA1 region of the
dorsal hippocampus of mice by recording neuronal response to aversive stimuli delivered
at changing locations. We have discovered a rapidly emerging, location independent
response to innoxious aversive stimuli composed of the coordinated activation of subgroups
of pyramidal cells and connected interneurons. Activated pyramidal cells had higher
basal firing rate, more probably participated in ripples, targeted more interneurons
than place cells and many of them lacked place fields. We also detected aversive stimulus-coupled
assemblies dominated by the activated neurons. Notably, these assemblies could be
observed even before the delivery of the first aversive event. Finally, we uncovered
the systematic shift of the spatial code from the aversive to, surprisingly, the reward
location during the fearful stimulus. Our results uncovered components of the dorsal
CA1 circuit possibly key for re-sculpting the spatial map in response to abrupt aversive
events.