Abstract
The present study sought to understand how the hippocampus and anterior thalamic nuclei are conjointly required for spatial learning by examining the impact of cutting a major tract (the fornix) that interconnects these two sites. The initial experiments examined the consequences of fornix lesions in rats on spatial biconditional discrimination learning. The rationale arose from previous findings showing that fornix lesions spare the learning of spatial biconditional tasks, despite the same task being highly sensitive to both hippocampal and anterior thalamic nuclei lesions. In the present study, fornix lesions only delayed acquisition of the spatial biconditional task, pointing to additional contributions from non-fornical routes linking the hippocampus with the anterior thalamic nuclei. The same fornix lesions spared the learning of an analogous nonspatial biconditional task that used local contextual cues. Subsequent tests, including T-maze place alternation, place learning in a cross-maze, and a go/no-go place discrimination, highlighted the impact of fornix lesions when distal spatial information is used flexibly to guide behaviour. The final experiment examined the ability to learn incidentally the spatial features of a square water-maze that had differently patterned walls. Fornix lesions disrupted performance but did not stop the rats from distinguishing the various corners of the maze. Overall, the results indicate that interconnections between the hippocampus and anterior thalamus, via the fornix, help to resolve problems with flexible spatial and temporal cues, but the results also signal the importance of additional, non-fornical contributions to hippocampal-anterior thalamic spatial processing, particularly for problems with more stable spatial solutions.
Highlights
Lesions of the hippocampus and the anterior thalamic nuclei produce a similar array of spatial learning deficits in rats
The present study examined the impact of fornix damage in rats with reference to what is known about the effects of lesions in the hippocampus and anterior thalamic nuclei on spatial learning
One pertinent issue concerns the impact of fornix lesions on spatial biconditional problems, as such tasks are often highly sensitive to both anterior thalamic and hippocampal damage (e.g., [13,23,66]), including when tested in a crossed-lesion disconnection study [32], yet appear to be spared after fornix lesions [24,41,60,62]
Summary
Lesions of the hippocampus and the anterior thalamic nuclei produce a similar array of spatial learning deficits in rats. The inference is that these interconnected structures function jointly to enable spatial learning, a view supported by crossed-lesion disconnection studies [32,87,88]. It has, often been supposed that the hippocampus primarily drives anterior thalamic nuclei activity, principally via its fornical projections (e.g., [1,2,19]). Dumont et al / Behavioural Brain Research 278 (2015) 360–374
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