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1.
Neuropsychopharmacology ; 49(6): 905-914, 2024 May.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38177696

The NMDA receptor (NMDAR) antagonist ketamine has shown great potential as a rapid-acting antidepressant; however, its use is limited by poor oral bioavailability and a side effect profile that necessitates in-clinic dosing. GM-1020 is a novel NMDAR antagonist that was developed to address these limitations of ketamine as a treatment for depression. Here, we present the preclinical characterization of GM-1020 alongside ketamine, for comparison. In vitro, we profiled GM-1020 for binding to NMDAR and functional inhibition using patch-clamp electrophysiology. In vivo, GM-1020 was assessed for antidepressant-like efficacy using the Forced Swim Test (FST) and Chronic Mild Stress (CMS), while motor side effects were assessed in spontaneous locomotor activity and on the rotarod. The pharmacokinetic properties of GM-1020 were profiled across multiple preclinical species. Electroencephalography (EEG) was performed to determine indirect target engagement and provide a potentially translational biomarker. These results demonstrate that GM-1020 is an orally bioavailable NMDAR antagonist with antidepressant-like efficacy at exposures that do not produce unwanted motor effects.


Antidepressive Agents , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate , Animals , Antidepressive Agents/administration & dosage , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacology , Antidepressive Agents/pharmacokinetics , Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/antagonists & inhibitors , Male , Rats , Mice , Administration, Oral , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Biological Availability , Ketamine/administration & dosage , Ketamine/pharmacology , Depression/drug therapy , Motor Activity/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/administration & dosage , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacology , Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists/pharmacokinetics , Humans
2.
Nature ; 600(7889): 484-488, 2021 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34759316

Could learning that uses cognitive control to judiciously use relevant information while ignoring distractions generally improve brain function, beyond forming explicit memories? According to a neuroplasticity hypothesis for how some cognitive behavioural therapies are effective, cognitive control training (CCT) changes neural circuit information processing1-3. Here we investigated whether CCT persistently alters hippocampal neural circuit function. We show that mice learned and remembered a conditioned place avoidance during CCT that required ignoring irrelevant locations of shock. CCT facilitated learning new tasks in novel environments for several weeks, relative to unconditioned controls and control mice that avoided the same place during reduced distraction. CCT rapidly changes entorhinal cortex-to-dentate gyrus synaptic circuit function, resulting in an excitatory-inhibitory subcircuit change that persists for months. CCT increases inhibition that attenuates the dentate response to medial entorhinal cortical input, and through disinhibition, potentiates the response to strong inputs, pointing to overall signal-to-noise enhancement. These neurobiological findings support the neuroplasticity hypothesis that, as well as storing item-event associations, CCT persistently optimizes neural circuit information processing.


Cognition/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Models, Neurological , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Animals , Avoidance Learning/physiology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/cytology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Conditioning, Operant/physiology , Dentate Gyrus/cytology , Dentate Gyrus/physiology , Entorhinal Cortex/cytology , Entorhinal Cortex/physiology , Female , GABAergic Neurons , Hippocampus/cytology , Long-Term Potentiation , Male , Memory/physiology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Neural Inhibition , Spatial Processing , Synapses/physiology
3.
Cell Rep ; 36(5): 109497, 2021 08 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34348165

Mouse hippocampus CA1 place-cell discharge typically encodes current location, but during slow gamma dominance (SGdom), when SG oscillations (30-50 Hz) dominate mid-frequency gamma oscillations (70-90 Hz) in CA1 local field potentials, CA1 discharge switches to represent distant recollected locations. We report that dentate spike type 2 (DSM) events initiated by medial entorhinal cortex II (MECII)→ dentate gyrus (DG) inputs promote SGdom and change excitation-inhibition coordinated discharge in DG, CA3, and CA1, whereas type 1 (DSL) events initiated by lateral entorhinal cortex II (LECII)→DG inputs do not. Just before SGdom, LECII-originating SG oscillations in DG and CA3-originating SG oscillations in CA1 phase and frequency synchronize at the DSM peak when discharge within DG and CA3 increases to promote excitation-inhibition cofiring within and across the DG→CA3→CA1 pathway. This optimizes discharge for the 5-10 ms DG-to-CA1 neuro-transmission that SGdom initiates. DSM properties identify extrahippocampal control of SGdom and a cortico-hippocampal mechanism that switches between memory-related modes of information processing.


Action Potentials/physiology , Hippocampus/physiology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Biomarkers/metabolism , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , CA3 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Dentate Gyrus/physiology , Gamma Rhythm/physiology , Memory/physiology , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Perforant Pathway/physiology , Signal Transduction
4.
IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng ; 26(4): 729-739, 2018 04.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29641377

Electroencephalography (EEG) has become increasingly valuable outside of its traditional use in neurology. EEG is now used for neuropsychiatric diagnosis, neurological evaluation of traumatic brain injury, neurotherapy, gaming, neurofeedback, mindfulness, and cognitive enhancement training. The trend to increase the number of EEG electrodes, the development of novel analytical methods, and the availability of large data sets has created a data analysis challenge to find the "signal of interest" that conveys the most information about ongoing cognitive effort. Accordingly, we compare three common types of neural synchrony measures that are applied to EEG-power analysis, phase locking, and phase-amplitude coupling to assess which analytical measure provides the best separation between EEG signals that were recorded, while healthy subjects performed eight cognitive tasks-Hopkins Verbal Learning Test and its delayed version, Stroop Test, Symbol Digit Modality Test, Controlled Oral Word Association Test, Trail Marking Test, Digit Span Test, and Benton Visual Retention Test. We find that of the three analytical methods, phase-amplitude coupling, specifically theta (4-7 Hz)-high gamma (70-90 Hz) obtained from frontal and parietal EEG electrodes provides both the largest separation between the EEG during cognitive tasks and also the highest classification accuracy between pairs of tasks. We also find that phase-locking analysis provides the most distinct clustering of tasks based on their utilization of long-term memory. Finally, we show that phase-amplitude coupling is the least sensitive to contamination by intense jaw-clenching muscle artifact.


Behavior , Cognition , Electroencephalography/classification , Algorithms , Artifacts , Electrodes , Electroencephalography Phase Synchronization , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Jaw/physiology , Male , Mental Recall , Principal Component Analysis , Scalp , Stroop Test , Trail Making Test , Verbal Learning , Word Association Tests , Young Adult
5.
Neuron ; 97(3): 684-697.e4, 2018 02 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29358017

Silence of FMR1 causes loss of fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) and dysregulated translation at synapses, resulting in the intellectual disability and autistic symptoms of fragile X syndrome (FXS). Synaptic dysfunction hypotheses for how intellectual disabilities like cognitive inflexibility arise in FXS predict impaired neural coding in the absence of FMRP. We tested the prediction by comparing hippocampus place cells in wild-type and FXS-model mice. Experience-driven CA1 synaptic function and synaptic plasticity changes are excessive in Fmr1-null mice, but CA1 place fields are normal. However, Fmr1-null discharge relationships to local field potential oscillations are abnormally weak, stereotyped, and homogeneous; also, discharge coordination within Fmr1-null place cell networks is weaker and less reliable than wild-type. Rather than disruption of single-cell neural codes, these findings point to invariant tuning of single-cell responses and inadequate discharge coordination within neural ensembles as a pathophysiological basis of cognitive inflexibility in FXS. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiopathology , Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein/genetics , Fragile X Syndrome/physiopathology , Long-Term Potentiation , Place Cells/physiology , Animals , Avoidance Learning , Disease Models, Animal , Fragile X Syndrome/genetics , Learning/physiology , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout
6.
PLoS Biol ; 16(1): e2003354, 2018 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29346381

Behavior is used to assess memory and cognitive deficits in animals like Fmr1-null mice that model Fragile X Syndrome, but behavior is a proxy for unknown neural events that define cognitive variables like recollection. We identified an electrophysiological signature of recollection in mouse dorsal Cornu Ammonis 1 (CA1) hippocampus. During a shocked-place avoidance task, slow gamma (SG) (30-50 Hz) dominates mid-frequency gamma (MG) (70-90 Hz) oscillations 2-3 s before successful avoidance, but not failures. Wild-type (WT) but not Fmr1-null mice rapidly adapt to relocating the shock; concurrently, SG/MG maxima (SGdom) decrease in WT but not in cognitively inflexible Fmr1-null mice. During SGdom, putative pyramidal cell ensembles represent distant locations; during place avoidance, these are avoided places. During shock relocation, WT ensembles represent distant locations near the currently correct shock zone, but Fmr1-null ensembles represent the formerly correct zone. These findings indicate that recollection occurs when CA1 SG dominates MG and that accurate recollection of inappropriate memories explains Fmr1-null cognitive inflexibility.


CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Memory/physiology , Animals , Biomarkers , Brain Waves/physiology , Cognition Disorders/physiopathology , Cognitive Dysfunction/physiopathology , Disease Models, Animal , Electrophysiological Phenomena/physiology , Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein/genetics , Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein/physiology , Gamma Rays , Gamma Rhythm/physiology , Hippocampus , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Pyramidal Cells , Temporal Lobe
7.
J Neurosci ; 37(49): 12031-12049, 2017 12 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29118102

We used the psychotomimetic phencyclidine (PCP) to investigate the relationships among cognitive behavior, coordinated neural network function, and information processing within the hippocampus place cell system. We report in rats that PCP (5 mg/kg, i.p.) impairs a well learned, hippocampus-dependent place avoidance behavior in rats that requires cognitive control even when PCP is injected directly into dorsal hippocampus. PCP increases 60-100 Hz medium-freguency gamma oscillations in hippocampus CA1 and these increases correlate with the cognitive impairment caused by systemic PCP administration. PCP discoordinates theta-modulated medium-frequency and slow gamma oscillations in CA1 LFPs such that medium-frequency gamma oscillations become more theta-organized than slow gamma oscillations. CA1 place cell firing fields are preserved under PCP, but the drug discoordinates the subsecond temporal organization of discharge among place cells. This discoordination causes place cell ensemble representations of a familiar space to cease resembling pre-PCP representations despite preserved place fields. These findings point to the cognitive impairments caused by PCP arising from neural discoordination. PCP disrupts the timing of discharge with respect to the subsecond timescales of theta and gamma oscillations in the LFP. Because these oscillations arise from local inhibitory synaptic activity, these findings point to excitation-inhibition discoordination as the root of PCP-induced cognitive impairment.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Hippocampal neural discharge is temporally coordinated on timescales of theta and gamma oscillations in the LFP and the discharge of a subset of pyramidal neurons called "place cells" is spatially organized such that discharge is restricted to locations called a cell's "place field." Because this temporal coordination and spatial discharge organization is thought to represent spatial knowledge, we used the psychotomimetic phencyclidine (PCP) to disrupt cognitive behavior and assess the importance of neural coordination and place fields for spatial cognition. PCP impaired the judicious use of spatial information and discoordinated hippocampal discharge without disrupting firing fields. These findings dissociate place fields from spatial cognitive behavior and suggest that hippocampus discharge coordination is crucial to spatial cognition.


CA1 Region, Hippocampal/drug effects , Hallucinogens/administration & dosage , Nerve Net/drug effects , Phencyclidine/administration & dosage , Spatial Behavior/drug effects , Animals , Avoidance Learning/drug effects , Avoidance Learning/physiology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiopathology , Hallucinogens/toxicity , Injections, Intraventricular , Locomotion/drug effects , Locomotion/physiology , Male , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Phencyclidine/toxicity , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Spatial Behavior/physiology
8.
Neurobiol Dis ; 88: 125-38, 2016 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26792400

Fragile X syndrome (FXS) patients do not make the fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP). The absence of FMRP causes dysregulated translation, abnormal synaptic plasticity and the most common form of inherited intellectual disability. But FMRP loss has minimal effects on memory itself, making it difficult to understand why the absence of FMRP impairs memory discrimination and increases risk of autistic symptoms in patients, such as exaggerated responses to environmental changes. While Fmr1 knockout (KO) and wild-type (WT) mice perform cognitive discrimination tasks, we find abnormal patterns of coupling between theta and gamma oscillations in perisomatic and dendritic hippocampal CA1 local field potentials of the KO. Perisomatic CA1 theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) decreases with familiarity in both the WT and KO, but activating an invisible shock zone, subsequently changing its location, or turning it off, changes the pattern of oscillatory events in the LFPs recorded along the somato-dendritic axis of CA1. The cognition-dependent changes of this pattern of neural activity are relatively constrained in WT mice compared to KO mice, which exhibit abnormally weak changes during the cognitive challenge caused by changing the location of the shock zone and exaggerated patterns of change when the shock zone is turned off. Such pathophysiology might explain how dysregulated translation leads to intellectual disability in FXS. These findings demonstrate major functional abnormalities after the loss of FMRP in the dynamics of neural oscillations and that these impairments would be difficult to detect by steady-state measurements with the subject at rest or in steady conditions.


Cognition Disorders/etiology , Discrimination, Psychological/physiology , Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein/metabolism , Fragile X Syndrome/complications , Gamma Rhythm/genetics , Theta Rhythm/genetics , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Azides , Cognition Disorders/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein/genetics , Fragile X Syndrome/genetics , Hippocampus/physiopathology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Octreotide/analogs & derivatives , Spectrum Analysis , Time Factors
9.
J Neurosci ; 35(33): 11656-66, 2015 Aug 19.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26290242

Behavioral studies have established a role for adult-born dentate granule cells in discriminating between similar memories. However, it is unclear how these cells mediate memory discrimination. Excitability is enhanced in maturing adult-born neurons, spurring the hypothesis that the activity of these cells "directly" encodes and stores memories. An alternative hypothesis posits that maturing neurons "indirectly" contribute to memory encoding by regulating excitation-inhibition balance. We evaluated these alternatives by using dentate-sensitive active place avoidance tasks to assess experience-dependent changes in dentate field potentials in the presence and absence of neurogenesis. Before training, X-ray ablation of adult neurogenesis-reduced dentate responses to perforant-path stimulation and shifted EPSP-spike coupling leftward. These differences were unchanged after place avoidance training with the shock zone in the initial location, which both groups learned to avoid equally well. In contrast, sham-treated mice decreased dentate responses and shifted EPSP-spike coupling leftward after the shock zone was relocated, whereas X-irradiated mice failed to show these changes in dentate function and were impaired on this test of memory discrimination. During place avoidance, excitation-inhibition coupled neural synchrony in dentate local field potentials was reduced in X-irradiated mice, especially in the θ band. The difference was most prominent during conflict learning, which is impaired in the X-irradiated mice. These findings indicate that maturing adult-born neurons regulate both functional network plasticity in response to memory discrimination and dentate excitation-inhibition coordination. The most parsimonious interpretation of these results is that adult neurogenesis indirectly regulates hippocampal information processing. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Adult-born neurons in the hippocampal dentate gyrus are important for flexibly using memories, but the mechanism is controversial. Using tests of hippocampus-dependent place avoidance learning and dentate electrophysiology in mice with normal or ablated neurogenesis, we find that maturing adult-born neurons are crucial only when memory must be used flexibly, and that these neurons regulate dentate gyrus synaptic and spiking responses to neocortical input rather than directly storing information, as has been proposed. A day after learning to avoid the initial or changed locations of shock, the dentate synaptic responses are enhanced or suppressed, respectively, unlike mice lacking adult neurogenesis, which did not change. The contribution of adult neurogenesis to memory is indirect, by regulating dentate excitation-inhibition coupling.


Cerebellar Nuclei/cytology , Cerebellar Nuclei/physiology , Memory/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Neurons/cytology , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Male , Mice , Neural Inhibition/physiology , Neurogenesis/physiology
10.
Neuron ; 82(3): 506-8, 2014 May 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24811375

CA1 place cells discharge in prospective and retrospective modes, possibly reflecting memory retrieval and encoding, respectively. In this issue of Neuron, Bieri et al. (2014) report that slow and fast gamma oscillations associate with prospective and retrospective discharge, indicating that gamma oscillations organize information-processing modes.


Action Potentials/physiology , Brain Waves/physiology , Hippocampus/cytology , Hippocampus/physiology , Animals , Male
11.
Front Psychiatry ; 5: 15, 2014.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24592242

Cognitive symptoms are core features of mental disorders but procognitive treatments are limited. We have proposed a "discoordination" hypothesis that cognitive impairment results from aberrant coordination of neural activity. We reported that neonatal ventral hippocampus lesion (NVHL) rats, an established neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia, have abnormal neural synchrony and cognitive deficits in the active place avoidance task. During stillness, we observed that cortical local field potentials sometimes resembled epileptiform spike-wave discharges with higher prevalence in NVHL rats, indicating abnormal neural synchrony due perhaps to imbalanced excitation-inhibition coupling. Here, within the context of the hypothesis, we investigated whether attenuating abnormal neural synchrony will improve cognition in NVHL rats. We report that: (1) inter-hippocampal synchrony in the theta and beta bands is correlated with active place avoidance performance; (2) the anticonvulsant ethosuximide attenuated the abnormal spike-wave activity, improved cognitive control, and reduced hyperlocomotion; (3) ethosuximide not only normalized the task-associated theta and beta synchrony between the two hippocampi but also increased synchrony between the medial prefrontal cortex and hippocampus above control levels; (4) the antipsychotic olanzapine was less effective at improving cognitive control and normalizing place avoidance-related inter-hippocampal neural synchrony, although it reduced hyperactivity; and (5) olanzapine caused an abnormal pattern of frequency-independent increases in neural synchrony, in both NVHL and control rats. These data suggest that normalizing aberrant neural synchrony can be beneficial and that drugs targeting the pathophysiology of abnormally coordinated neural activities may be a promising theoretical framework and strategy for developing treatments that improve cognition in neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia.

12.
J Neurosci Methods ; 225: 42-56, 2014 Mar 30.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24447842

BACKGROUND: The phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) between distinct neural oscillations is critical to brain functions that include cross-scale organization, selection of attention, routing the flow of information through neural circuits, memory processing and information coding. Several methods for PAC estimation have been proposed but the limitations of PAC estimation as well as the assumptions about the data for accurate PAC estimation are unclear. NEW METHOD: We define boundary conditions for standard PAC algorithms and propose "oscillation-triggered coupling" (OTC), a parameter-free, data-driven algorithm for unbiased estimation of PAC. OTC establishes a unified framework that treats individual oscillations as discrete events for estimating PAC from a set of oscillations and for characterizing events from time windows as short as a single modulating oscillation. RESULTS: For accurate PAC estimation, standard PAC algorithms require amplitude filters with a bandwidth at least twice the modulatory frequency. The phase filters must be moderately narrow-band, especially when the modulatory rhythm is non-sinusoidal. The minimally appropriate analysis window is ∼10s. We then demonstrate that OTC can characterize PAC by treating neural oscillations as discrete events rather than continuous phase and amplitude time series. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHODS: These findings show that in addition to providing the same information about PAC as the standard approach, OTC facilitates characterization of single oscillations and their sequences, in addition to explaining the role of individual oscillations in generating PAC patterns. CONCLUSIONS: OTC allows PAC analysis at the level of individual oscillations and therefore enables investigation of PAC at the time scales of cognitive phenomena.


Algorithms , Brain/physiology , Electrophysiology/methods , Models, Neurological , Neurons/physiology , Animals , Male , Mice , Rats , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
13.
Neuron ; 75(4): 714-24, 2012 Aug 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22920261

Brain abnormalities acquired early in life may cause schizophrenia, characterized by adulthood onset of psychosis, affective flattening, and cognitive impairments. Cognitive symptoms, like impaired cognitive control, are now recognized to be important treatment targets but cognition-promoting treatments are ineffective. We hypothesized that cognitive training during the adolescent period of neuroplastic development can tune compromised neural circuits to develop in the service of adult cognition and attenuate schizophrenia-related cognitive impairments that manifest in adulthood. We report, using neonatal ventral hippocampus lesion rats (NVHL), an established neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia, that adolescent cognitive training prevented the adult cognitive control impairment in NVHL rats. The early intervention also normalized brain function, enhancing cognition-associated synchrony of neural oscillations between the hippocampi, a measure of brain function that indexed cognitive ability. Adolescence appears to be a critical window during which prophylactic cognitive therapy may benefit people at risk of schizophrenia.


Cognition Disorders/etiology , Cognition Disorders/prevention & control , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Developmental Disabilities/complications , Schizophrenia/complications , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Avoidance Learning , Brain Waves/drug effects , Cell Count , Conditioning, Operant/drug effects , Developmental Disabilities/chemically induced , Developmental Disabilities/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Electroencephalography , Excitatory Amino Acid Agonists , Female , Functional Laterality/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation/physiology , Hippocampus/drug effects , Hippocampus/injuries , Hippocampus/metabolism , Ibotenic Acid/toxicity , Male , Maze Learning , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Parvalbumins/metabolism , Pregnancy , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Schizophrenia/chemically induced , Schizophrenia/pathology
14.
PLoS One ; 6(7): e22349, 2011.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21789250

Previously we reported that the hippocampus place code must be an ensemble code because place cells in the CA1 region of hippocampus have multiple place fields in a more natural, larger-than-standard enclosure with stairs that permitted movements in 3-D. Here, we further investigated the nature of hippocampal place codes by characterizing the spatial firing properties of place cells in the CA1, CA3, and dentate gyrus (DG) hippocampal subdivisions as rats foraged in a standard 76-cm cylinder as well as a larger-than-standard box (1.8 m×1.4 m) that did not have stairs or any internal structure to permit movements in 3-D. The rats were trained to forage continuously for 1 hour using computer-controlled food delivery. We confirmed that most place cells have single place fields in the standard cylinder and that the positional firing pattern remapped between the cylinder and the large enclosure. Importantly, place cells in the CA1, CA3 and DG areas all characteristically had multiple place fields that were irregularly spaced, as we had reported previously for CA1. We conclude that multiple place fields are a fundamental characteristic of hippocampal place cells that simplifies to a single field in sufficiently small spaces. An ensemble place code is compatible with these observations, which contradict any dedicated coding scheme.


Action Potentials/physiology , CA1 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , CA3 Region, Hippocampal/physiology , Dentate Gyrus/physiology , Environment , Animals , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Male , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans
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