A Functional Role for Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis in Spatial Pattern Separation
Salk Institute for Biological Studies · University of Cambridge · +3 more institutions
Abstract
The dentate gyrus (DG) of the mammalian hippocampus is hypothesized to mediate pattern separation-the formation of distinct and orthogonal representations of mnemonic information-and also undergoes neurogenesis throughout life. How neurogenesis contributes to hippocampal function is largely unknown. Using adult mice in which hippocampal neurogenesis was ablated, we found specific impairments in spatial discrimination with two behavioral assays: (i) a spatial navigation radial arm maze task and (ii) a spatial, but non-navigable, task in the mouse touch screen. Mice with ablated neurogenesis were impaired when stimuli were presented with little spatial separation, but not when stimuli were more widely separated…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Neurogenesis
- Dentate gyrus
- Hippocampal formation
- Neuroscience
- Hippocampus
- Episodic memory
- Psychology
- Cognition
- Reduced inequalities