Spatial learning impairments and discoordination of entorhinal‐hippocampal circuit coding following prolonged febrile seizures

Author:

Kloc Michelle L.1ORCID,Chen Yuncai23,Daglian Jennifer M.2,Holmes Gregory L.1,Baram Tallie Z.234,Barry Jeremy M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Epilepsy Cognition and Development Group, Department of Neurological Sciences University of Vermont, Larner College of Medicine Burlington Vermont USA

2. Departments of Pediatrics University California‐Irvine Irvine California USA

3. Departments of Anatomy/Neurobiology University California‐Irvine Irvine California USA

4. Departments of Neurology University California‐Irvine Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractHow the development and function of neural circuits governing learning and memory are affected by insults in early life remains poorly understood. The goal of this study was to identify putative changes in cortico‐hippocampal signaling mechanisms that could lead to learning and memory deficits in a clinically relevant developmental pathophysiological rodent model, Febrile status epilepticus (FSE). FSE in both pediatric cases and the experimental animal model, is associated with enduring physiological alterations of the hippocampal circuit and cognitive impairment. Here, we deconstruct hippocampal circuit throughput by inducing slow theta oscillations in rats under urethane anesthesia and isolating the dendritic compartments of CA1 and dentate gyrus subfields, their reception of medial and lateral entorhinal cortex inputs, and the efficacy of signal propagation to each somatic cell layer. We identify FSE‐induced theta‐gamma decoupling at cortical synaptic input pathways and altered signal phase coherence along the CA1 and dentate gyrus somatodendritic axes. Moreover, increased DG synaptic activity levels are predictive of poor cognitive outcomes. We propose that these alterations in cortico‐hippocampal coordination interfere with the ability of hippocampal dendrites to receive, decode and propagate neocortical inputs. If this frequency‐specific syntax is necessary for cortico‐hippocampal coordination and spatial learning and memory, its loss could be a mechanism for FSE cognitive comorbidities.

Funder

American Epilepsy Society

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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