Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory
Watson JF, Vargas-Barroso V, Morse-Mora RJ, Navas-Olive A, Tavakoli M, Danzl JG, Tomschik M, Rössler K, Jonas PM. Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory. bioRxiv, 10.1101/2024.05.02.592169.
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https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.02.592169
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Author
Watson, Jake F.;
Vargas-Barroso, Victor;
Morse-Mora, Rebecca J.;
Navas-Olive, Andrea;
R. Tavakoli, MojtabaISTA ;
Danzl, Johann GISTA ;
Tomschik, Matthias;
Rössler, Karl;
Jonas, Peter MISTA
Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
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Grant
Abstract
The human brain has remarkable computational power. It generates sophisticated behavioral sequences, stores engrams over an individual’s lifetime, and produces higher cognitive functions up to the level of consciousness. However, so little of our neuroscience knowledge covers the human brain, and it remains unknown whether this organ is truly unique, or is a scaled version of the extensively studied rodent brain. To address this fundamental question, we determined the cellular, synaptic, and connectivity rules of the hippocampal CA3 recurrent circuit using multicellular patch clamp-recording. This circuit is the largest autoassociative network in the brain, and plays a key role in memory and higher-order computations such as pattern separation and pattern completion. We demonstrate that human hippocampal CA3 employs sparse connectivity, in stark contrast to neocortical recurrent networks. Connectivity sparsifies from rodents to humans, providing a circuit architecture that maximizes associational power. Unitary synaptic events at human CA3–CA3 synapses showed both distinct species-specific and circuit-dependent properties, with high reliability, unique amplitude precision, and long integration times. We also identify differential scaling rules between hippocampal pathways from rodents to humans, with a moderate increase in the convergence of CA3 inputs per cell, but a marked increase in human mossy fiber innervation. Anatomically guided full-scale modeling suggests that the human brain’s sparse connectivity, expanded neuronal number, and reliable synaptic signaling combine to enhance the associative memory storage capacity of CA3. Together, our results reveal unique rules of connectivity and synaptic signaling in the human hippocampus, demonstrating the absolute necessity of human brain research and beginning to unravel the remarkable performance of our autoassociative memory circuits.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2024-05-02
Journal Title
bioRxiv
Acknowledgement
We thank Florian Marr for excellent technical assistance, Christina Altmutter and Julia Flor for technical support, Alois Schlögl for programming, Todor Asenov for development of the transportation box for human brain tissue, Tim Vogels for guidance on simulations, Marcus Huber for mathematical advice, and Eleftheria Kralli-Beller for manuscript editing. This research was supported by the Scientific Services Units (SSUs) of ISTA, and we are particularly grateful for assistance from Christoph Sommer and the Imaging and Optics Facility, Preclinical Facility, Life Science Facility, Miba Machine Shop, and Scientific Computing. We also acknowledge the excellent support of the Medical University of Vienna Department of Neurosurgery staff, Romana Hoeftberger and the Division of Neuropathology and Neurochemistry, and Gregor Kasprian and the Division of Neuroradiology and Musculoskeletal Radiology. The project received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Individual Fellowship no. 101026635 to J.F.W.), the Austrian Science Fund (FWF; grant PAT 4178023 to P.J.; grant DK W1232 to M.R.T. and J.G.D.) and the Austrian Academy of Sciences (DOC fellowship 26137 to M.R.T.).
Acknowledged SSUs
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Cite this
Watson JF, Vargas-Barroso V, Morse-Mora RJ, et al. Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/2024.05.02.592169
Watson, J. F., Vargas-Barroso, V., Morse-Mora, R. J., Navas-Olive, A., Tavakoli, M., Danzl, J. G., … Jonas, P. M. (n.d.). Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory. bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.02.592169
Watson, Jake F., Victor Vargas-Barroso, Rebecca J. Morse-Mora, Andrea Navas-Olive, Mojtaba Tavakoli, Johann G Danzl, Matthias Tomschik, Karl Rössler, and Peter M Jonas. “Human Hippocampal CA3 Uses Specific Functional Connectivity Rules for Efficient Associative Memory.” BioRxiv, n.d. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.05.02.592169.
J. F. Watson et al., “Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory,” bioRxiv. .
Watson JF, Vargas-Barroso V, Morse-Mora RJ, Navas-Olive A, Tavakoli M, Danzl JG, Tomschik M, Rössler K, Jonas PM. Human hippocampal CA3 uses specific functional connectivity rules for efficient associative memory. bioRxiv, 10.1101/2024.05.02.592169.
Watson, Jake F., et al. “Human Hippocampal CA3 Uses Specific Functional Connectivity Rules for Efficient Associative Memory.” BioRxiv, doi:10.1101/2024.05.02.592169.
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