Data from: Glutamatergic drive along the septo-temporal axis of hippocampus boosts prelimbic oscillations in the neonatal mouse
Data files
Mar 09, 2019 version files 237.61 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1B.xlsx
                11.47 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1C(ii).xlsx
                12.08 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1D.xlsx
                22.52 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1F.xlsx
                11.47 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1H.xlsx
                12.08 KB
- 
              
                Figure 1J.xlsx
                27.75 KB
- 
              
                Figure 2B(ii).xlsx
                16.17 KB
- 
              
                Figure 2C.xlsx
                18.48 KB
- 
              
                Figure 3C.xlsx
                62.08 KB
- 
              
                Figure 4A.xlsx
                8.30 KB
- 
              
                Figure 5D(ii).xlsx
                12.46 KB
- 
              
                Figure 6B(ii).xlsx
                11.99 KB
- 
              
                Figure 6Cii).xlsx
                10.77 KB
Abstract
    The long-range coupling within prefrontal-hippocampal networks that account for cognitive performance emerges early in life. The discontinuous hippocampal theta bursts have been proposed to drive the generation of neonatal prefrontal oscillations, yet the cellular substrate of these early interactions is still unresolved. Here, we selectively target optogenetic manipulation of glutamatergic projection neurons in the CA1 area of either dorsal or intermediate/ventral hippocampus at neonatal age to elucidate their contribution to the emergence of prefrontal oscillatory entrainment. We show that despite stronger theta and ripples power in dorsal hippocampus, the prefrontal cortex is mainly coupled with intermediate/ventral hippocampus by phase-locking of neuronal firing via dense direct axonal projections. Theta band-confined activation by light of pyramidal neurons in intermediate/ventral but not dorsal CA1 that were transfected by in utero electroporation with high-efficiency channelrhodopsin boosts prefrontal oscillations. Our data causally elucidates the cellular origin of the long-range coupling in the developing brain.
  
  
  
  