Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4321631 Neuron 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryNetwork oscillations support transient communication across brain structures. We show here, in rats, that task-related neuronal activity in the medial prefrontal cortex (PFC), the hippocampus, and the ventral tegmental area (VTA), regions critical for working memory, is coordinated by a 4 Hz oscillation. A prominent increase of power and coherence of the 4 Hz oscillation in the PFC and the VTA and its phase modulation of gamma power in both structures was present in the working memory part of the task. Subsets of both PFC and hippocampal neurons predicted the turn choices of the rat. The goal-predicting PFC pyramidal neurons were more strongly phase locked to both 4 Hz and hippocampal theta oscillations than nonpredicting cells. The 4 Hz and theta oscillations were phase coupled and jointly modulated both gamma waves and neuronal spikes in the PFC, the VTA, and the hippocampus. Thus, multiplexed timing mechanisms in the PFC-VTA-hippocampus axis may support processing of information, including working memory.

► A 4 Hz oscillation coordinates task-related PFC, VTA, and hippocampal activity ► The 4 Hz wave phase modulates gamma waves and neuronal firing in these brain areas ► The power of the 4 Hz wave is increased in the working-memory part of the task ► PFC goal-predicting neurons are strongly phase locked to the 4 Hz rhythm

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