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Main Menu - Block
- Overview
- Anatomy and Histology
- Cryo-Electron Microscopy
- Electron Microscopy
- Flow Cytometry
- Gene Targeting and Transgenics
- High Performance Computing
- Immortalized Cell Line Culture
- Integrative Imaging
- Invertebrate Shared Resource
- Janelia Experimental Technology
- Mass Spectrometry
- Media Prep
- Molecular Genomics
- Primary & iPS Cell Culture
- Project Pipeline Support
- Project Technical Resources
- Quantitative Genomics
- Scientific Computing
- Viral Tools
- Vivarium
Abstract
To navigate their environments effectively, animals frequently track time elapsed or distance traveled while seeking food and avoiding threats. The hippocampus is implicated in this process, but the neural mechanisms remain unclear. Using virtual reality tasks that require mice to integrate time or distance to collect a reward, we identified two previously unknown functional subpopulations of CA1 pyramidal neurons. Both subpopulations encode time or distance via distinct ramping dynamics. The first subpopulation exhibits a rapid, synchronous rise in activity upon movement-initiated integration. Subsequently, individual neurons ramp down at heterogeneous rates, creating progressively diverging firing rates that encode elapsed time or distance. Closed-loop optogenetic inactivation of somatostatin-positive (SST) interneurons counterintuitively reduced the ramping activity, leading mice to prematurely attempt reward collection, suggesting impaired time/distance estimation. Conversely, the second CA1 subpopulation shows opposite dynamics - an initial rapid suppression followed by a gradual ramp-up. Inactivating parvalbumin-positive (PV) interneurons diminished this initial suppression, resulting in transient attempts to collect reward near integration onset. These findings reveal parallel hippocampal circuits that initiate and maintain time or distance encoding, controlled by PV and SST interneurons, respectively, and provide insights into the neural computations supporting goal-directed navigation.


