Pyramidal-cell-specific hemispheric asymmetry shapes dorsoventral CA1 dynamics during rest and exploratory behavior

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Pyramidal-cell-specific hemispheric asymmetry shapes dorsoventral CA1 dynamics during rest and exploratory behavior

Authors

Kim, C. S.; Banks, J.; LAD, M.; Kang, S.

Abstract

The hippocampus is organized along dorsal-ventral and left-right axes, but whether and how these axes interact within defined neuronal populations across behavioral states remains unresolved. Here, we combined within-animal slice electrophysiology with dual-site fiber photometry to compare dorsal and ventral CA1 activity across contralateral hemispheric configurations in mice expressing CaMKII-jGCaMP8s and SynI-jRCaMP1b at distinct longitudinal sites. Ventral CA1 pyramidal neurons exhibited greater intrinsic excitability and stronger AMPAR-mediated synaptic responses than dorsal CA1 neurons. In vivo, CaMKII-defined pyramidal recordings during home cage rest revealed a left-biased event-rate asymmetry within dorsal but not ventral CA1, with no comparable asymmetry in pan-neuronal SynI recordings. Apparent dorsal-ventral differences in spontaneous event rate were therefore configuration-dependent and resolved into a hemispheric, cell-type-specific effect restricted to the CaMKII-defined population. Lead-lag analysis showed that dorsal-ventral temporal coordination was likewise reorganized across configurations and was restricted to pyramidal-cell-biased recordings. During open-field center entries, dorsal CA1 was preferentially recruited before entry across both configurations, whereas non-coordinated entries revealed a relative post-entry suppression of contralateral ventral CA1. Together, these findings suggest that dorsal-ventral CA1 organization cannot be inferred from hemisphere-pooled designs and identify a pyramidal-cell-specific left dorsal CA1 asymmetry as a structural feature that shapes both spontaneous activity and behaviorally driven recruitment along the longitudinal hippocampal axis.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment