IPSHITA ZUTSHI

Postdoctoral Fellow

Projections from the medial entorhinal cortex influence the timing and content of CA1 sharp wave ripples



Given the assumed pivotal role of the medial entorhinal cortex (mEC)  in controlling hippocampal activity, I examined whether and how optogenetic silencing of the mEC affects hippocampal sharp wave ripples (SPW-Rs). SPW-Rs are population bursts in the hippocampus that generally occur during Non-REM sleep, and are precisely coordinated with neocortical sleep states, playing an essential role in cortico-hippocampal memory consolidation.

I found that mEC silencing reduced SPW-R occurrence, altered their spike content and suppressed their relationship with neocortical UP-DOWN states. These results suggest that a main role of mEC is to select neuronal assemblies of SPW-Rs and temporally coordinate their occurrences with neocortical events (Zutshi & Buzsáki, 2023).  
Data from a 64-site recording session along the CA1-DG axis as the mouse is in its home cage. Top , spike rasters from CA1 interneurons (dark purple), CA3/DG interneurons (light purple), CA1 pyramidal cells (dark yellow) and CA3/DG pyramidal cells (light yellow). Bottom , Current source density , calculated from the LFP. mEC optogenetic silencing is marked by a solid blue line, and a “Stim ON” label. Notice a huge reduction in sharp wave ripples upon mEC silencing.