Abstract

The hippocampus is essential for normal memory but does not act in isolation. The anterior thalamic nuclei may represent one vital partner. Using DREADDs, the behavioral consequences of transiently disrupting anterior thalamic function were examined, followed by inactivation of the dorsal subiculum. Next, the anterograde transport of an adeno-associated virus expressing DREADDs was paired with localized intracerebral infusions of a ligand to target specific input pathways. In this way, the direct projections from the anterior thalamic nuclei to the dorsal hippocampal formation were inhibited, followed by separate inhibition of the dorsal subiculum projections to the anterior thalamic nuclei. To assay spatial working memory, all animals performed a reinforced T-maze alternation task, then a more challenging version that nullifies intramaze cues. Across all four experiments, deficits emerged on the spatial alternation task that precluded the use of intramaze cues. Inhibiting dorsal subiculum projections to the anterior thalamic nuclei produced the severest spatial working memory deficit. This deficit revealed the key contribution of dorsal subiculum projections to the anteromedial and anteroventral thalamic nuclei for the processing of allocentric information, projections not associated with head-direction information. The overall pattern of results provides consistent causal evidence of the two-way functional significance of direct hippocampal-anterior thalamic interactions for spatial processing. At the same time, these findings are consistent with hypotheses that these same, reciprocal interactions underlie the common core symptoms of temporal lobe and diencephalic anterograde amnesia.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT It has long been conjectured that the anterior thalamic nuclei might be key partners with the hippocampal formation and that, respectively, they are principally responsible for diencephalic and temporal lobe amnesia. However, direct causal evidence for this functional relationship is lacking. Here, we examined the behavioral consequences of transiently silencing the direct reciprocal interconnections between these two brain regions on tests of spatial learning. Disrupting information flow from the hippocampal formation to the anterior thalamic nuclei and vice versa impaired performance on tests of spatial learning. By revealing the conjoint importance of hippocampal-anterior thalamic pathways, these findings help explain why pathology in either the medial diencephalon or the medial temporal lobes can result in profound anterograde amnesic syndromes.

Highlights

  • The importance of the hippocampal formation for memory remains irrefutable, yet the structure does not act in isolation

  • Experiment 1: ATN are required for spatial working memory To assay the role of ATN in spatially working memory, an adeno-associated virus carrying the hM4Di receptor (AAV5CaMKIIa-hM4Di(Gi)-mCherry) was injected into the ATN (ANT_iDRD group) (Fig. 3A), while control animals received injections of the same virus (AAV5-CaMKlla-EGFP) not expressing the designer receptor exclusively activated by designer drugs (DREADDs) receptor (ATN_Control)

  • There was no evidence of retrograde label in sites with which the ATN are reciprocally connected with the pattern of label in these sites (Figs. 1, 4A-D) consistent with anterograde transport as previously described with standard anatomic tracing methods (Shibata, 1993a,b)

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Summary

Introduction

The importance of the hippocampal formation for memory remains irrefutable, yet the structure does not act in isolation. Initial evidence comes from the dense, reciprocal connections between the hippocampal formation and these nuclei (Meibach and Siegel, 1977; Shibata, 1993a; Wright et al, 2010; Christiansen et al, 2016). While the anteromedial and anteroventral thalamic nuclei are principally interconnected with the dorsal subiculum, the anterodorsal thalamic nucleus is largely interconnected with parahippocampal areas, including the postsubiculum and presubiculum (Meibach and Siegel, 1977; van Groen and Wyss, 1990a,b; Shibata, 1993a; Christiansen et al, 2016) (Fig. 1). Further relevant evidence comes from neuropsychological studies showing that pathology or disconnection of the human ATN appears closely associated with anterograde amnesia While the anteromedial and anteroventral thalamic nuclei are principally interconnected with the dorsal subiculum, the anterodorsal thalamic nucleus is largely interconnected with parahippocampal areas, including the postsubiculum and presubiculum (Meibach and Siegel, 1977; van Groen and Wyss, 1990a,b; Shibata, 1993a; Christiansen et al, 2016) (Fig. 1). [Throughout, the terms hippocampal formation and hippocampal refer to the dentate gyrus, the CA fields, and the subiculum (Burwell and Witter, 2002)].

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