Plasticity in prefrontal cortex induced by coordinated nucleus reuniens and hippocampal synaptic transmission

2020 
The nucleus reuniens of the thalamus (NRe) is reciprocally connected to a range of higher order cortices including hippocampus (HPC) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). The physiological function of NRe is well predicted by requirement for interactions between mPFC and HPC, including associative recognition memory, spatial navigation and working memory. Although anatomical and electrophysiological evidence suggests NRe makes excitatory synapses in mPFC there is little data on the physiological properties of these projections, or whether NRe and HPC target overlapping cell populations and, if so, how they interact. We demonstrate in ex vivo mPFC slices that NRe and HPC afferent inputs converge onto more than two-thirds of layer 5 pyramidal neurons, show that NRe, but not HPC, undergoes marked short-term plasticity at theta, and that HPC, but not NRe, afferents are subject to neuromodulation by acetylcholine acting via muscarinic receptor M2. Finally, we demonstrate that pairing HPC followed by NRe (but not pairing NRe followed by HPC) at theta frequency induces associative, NMDA receptor dependent synaptic plasticity in both inputs to mPFC. These data provide vital physiological phenotypes of the synapses of this circuit and provide a novel mechanism for HPC-NRe-mPFC encoding.
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