A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation

Declarative memories initially depend on the hippocampus. Over a period of weeks to years, however, these memories become hippocampus-independent through a process called system memory consolidation. The underlying cellular mechanisms are unclear. Here, we suggest a consolidation mechanism, which is...

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Main Author: Michiel W. H. Remme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fnsys.2014.05.00010/full
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spelling doaj-f993ed7f10a643638c0498b05dd436d62020-11-24T22:57:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372014-03-01810.3389/conf.fnsys.2014.05.0001092863A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidationMichiel W. H. Remme0Humboldt University BerlinDeclarative memories initially depend on the hippocampus. Over a period of weeks to years, however, these memories become hippocampus-independent through a process called system memory consolidation. The underlying cellular mechanisms are unclear. Here, we suggest a consolidation mechanism, which is based on STDP and a ubiquitous anatomical network motif. As a first step in the memory consolidation process, we consider pyramidal neurons in the hippocampal CA1 area. These cells receive Schaffer collateral (SC) input from the CA3 area at the proximal dendrites, and perforant path (PP) input from entorhinal cortex at the distal dendrites. Both pathways carry sensory information that has been processed by cortical networks and that enters the hippocampus through the entorhinal cortex. Hence, information from entorhinal cortex reaches CA1 cells through an indirect pathway (via CA3 and SC) and a direct pathway (PP). Memories are assumed to be initially stored in the recurrent CA3 network and the SC synapses during the awake, exploratory state. During a subsequent consolidation phase (during slow-wave sleep) SC-dependent memories are partly transferred to the PP synapses. Through mathematical analysis and numerical simulations we show that this consolidation process occurs as a natural result from the combination of (1) STDP at PP synapses and (2) the temporal correlations between SC and PP activities, since the (indirect) SC input is delayed compared to the (direct) PP input by about 5-10 ms. With a detailed compartmental model we then show that the spatial tuning of a CA1 cell is copied from the proximal SC-synaptic inputs to the distal PP-inputs. Next, we repeated the network motif across many levels in a hierarchical network model: each direct connection at one level is part of the indirect pathway of the next level. Analysis and simulations of this hierarchical system demonstrate that memories gradually move from hippocampus into neocortex. Moreover, the memories show power-law forgetting, as seen with psychophysical forgetting functions. Hence, our work proposes a novel mechanism to underlie system memory consolidation, allowing us to bridge spatial scales from single cells to cortical areas, and time scales from milliseconds to years.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fnsys.2014.05.00010/fullHippocampusNeocortexdendritic integrationPyramidal neuronsstdp learningSystem memory consolidation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michiel W. H. Remme
spellingShingle Michiel W. H. Remme
A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Hippocampus
Neocortex
dendritic integration
Pyramidal neurons
stdp learning
System memory consolidation
author_facet Michiel W. H. Remme
author_sort Michiel W. H. Remme
title A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
title_short A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
title_full A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
title_fullStr A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
title_full_unstemmed A cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
title_sort cellular mechanism for system memory consolidation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Declarative memories initially depend on the hippocampus. Over a period of weeks to years, however, these memories become hippocampus-independent through a process called system memory consolidation. The underlying cellular mechanisms are unclear. Here, we suggest a consolidation mechanism, which is based on STDP and a ubiquitous anatomical network motif. As a first step in the memory consolidation process, we consider pyramidal neurons in the hippocampal CA1 area. These cells receive Schaffer collateral (SC) input from the CA3 area at the proximal dendrites, and perforant path (PP) input from entorhinal cortex at the distal dendrites. Both pathways carry sensory information that has been processed by cortical networks and that enters the hippocampus through the entorhinal cortex. Hence, information from entorhinal cortex reaches CA1 cells through an indirect pathway (via CA3 and SC) and a direct pathway (PP). Memories are assumed to be initially stored in the recurrent CA3 network and the SC synapses during the awake, exploratory state. During a subsequent consolidation phase (during slow-wave sleep) SC-dependent memories are partly transferred to the PP synapses. Through mathematical analysis and numerical simulations we show that this consolidation process occurs as a natural result from the combination of (1) STDP at PP synapses and (2) the temporal correlations between SC and PP activities, since the (indirect) SC input is delayed compared to the (direct) PP input by about 5-10 ms. With a detailed compartmental model we then show that the spatial tuning of a CA1 cell is copied from the proximal SC-synaptic inputs to the distal PP-inputs. Next, we repeated the network motif across many levels in a hierarchical network model: each direct connection at one level is part of the indirect pathway of the next level. Analysis and simulations of this hierarchical system demonstrate that memories gradually move from hippocampus into neocortex. Moreover, the memories show power-law forgetting, as seen with psychophysical forgetting functions. Hence, our work proposes a novel mechanism to underlie system memory consolidation, allowing us to bridge spatial scales from single cells to cortical areas, and time scales from milliseconds to years.
topic Hippocampus
Neocortex
dendritic integration
Pyramidal neurons
stdp learning
System memory consolidation
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/conf.fnsys.2014.05.00010/full
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