Cellular Switch Helps Brain Tell Safety From Danger

Published

A cellular circuit that helps the mouse brain to remember which environments are safe, and which are harmful, has been identified by researchers at Columbia University’s Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute and the Department of Neuroscience at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC).

The study also reveals what can happen when that circuitry is disrupted, and may offer new insight into the treatment of conditions such as posttraumatic stress, panic and anxiety disorders.

Learning and memory are among the brain’s most fundamental tools for survival. Accurate encoding of ‘contextual’ memories—those associated with particular experiences—enables us to exhibit the appropriate fear responses and, importantly, avoid dangerous situations.

Of equal importance is the brain’s ability to discriminate between an environment that it has previously learned to be dangerous and one that is safe.

A Third Pathway

Earlier research demonstrated that contextual memories are formed and stored in two interconnected brain regions: the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex, which are involved in memory and navigation. These two regions are linked via a complex network of brain cells, or neurons.

Although scientists have been able to determine how most of this network operates, one connection has remained puzzling. Explained Jayeeta Basu, PhD, an assistant professor in neuroscience and physiology at the NYU Neuroscience Institute.

“Neurons in the entorhinal cortex wind their way into the hippocampus via two distinct routes, or pathways. It is thought that contextual memories are formed when these two pathways became activated as part of a carefully timed sequence. But a few years ago, scientists discovered a third pathway that linked the two regions whose purpose was unknown.”

Dr. Basu was this study’s first author and is a former postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Steven Siegelbaum, PhD, at CUMC.

About 80% of neurons in the brain are excitatory, meaning that they carry communications long distances across brain regions. The other 20% are inhibitory.

Long-range Inhibitory Projections

These inhibitory neurons act locally to slow or halt the excitatory activity, much like tapping the brake pedal after a period of acceleration. What was so unusual about the neurons in this recently discovered third pathway was that they acted across a relatively long distance but were also inhibitory.

So scientists called them long-range inhibitory projections, or LRIPs.

The purpose of this study was to investigate the role these LRIPs may play in learning and memory. First, the researchers temporarily silenced them in the mouse brains.

Then, the mice were placed in a room where they were given a brief but aversive footshock. When returned to the same room 24 hours later, the mice remembered the shock and exhibited a fear response, indicating that LRIPs were not required for the formation of fearful memories.

But when placed in a completely different room, these mice again exhibited fear, suggesting they were generalizing their initial fear in a different context.

This is in stark contrast to what was observed in normal, healthy mice, which only exhibited a fear response in the room where they had been shocked—and thus revealing their ability to distinguish between dangerous and neutral environments.

Sophisticated Gating Mechanism

Additional imaging experiments and electrical recordings from normal, healthy mouse brains revealed the precise role of LRIPs in astounding detail.

Normally a stimulus, such as a sound, light or small footshock, activates the LRIPs, which send an inhibitory signal from the entorhinal cortex into the hippocampus. Upon arrival, the LRIP signal actually inhibits another set of inhibitory neurons in the hippocampus.

This then frees up neurons in the hippocampus to switch on and, ultimately, generate a memory.

This seemingly confusing series of signal relays is actually part of a sophisticated gating mechanism, as evidenced by a short, 20-millisecond delay between when the LRIPs are initially activated, and when their inhibitory signals arrive in the hippocampus.

“This brief delay enables the electrical signals to flow into the hippocampus in an elegant, precisely timed sequence, which is ultimately what allows the memory to form and be stored with the appropriate specificity so that it can be recalled accurately,” said Dr. Siegelbaum, senior author of the paper. “Without this delay, fearful memories lack specificity and accuracy, preventing the brain from appropriately distinguishing danger from safety.”

Said Attila Losonczy, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of neuroscience at CUMC, a principal investigator at the Zuckerman Institute, and a co-author of this study:

“The implications of these findings for the human brain, while preliminary, are intriguing. The study suggests that any alterations in these pathways activity—particularly a disruption of the timed delay—may contribute to pathological forms of fear response, such as posttraumatic stress, anxiety, or panic disorders.”

Reference:
  1. Jayeeta Basu, Jeffrey D. Zaremba, Stephanie K. Cheung, Frederick L. Hitti, Boris V. Zemelman, Attila Losonczy, and Steven A. Siegelbaum. Gating of hippocampal activity, plasticity, and memory by entorhinal cortex long-range inhibition. Science 8 January 2016: 351 (6269), aaa5694 DOI:10.1126/science.aaa5694

Last Updated on December 26, 2023