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The impact of ageing reveals distinct roles for human dentate gyrus and CA3 in pattern separation and object recognition memory

Authors :
Catherine Pennington
Margaret Newson
Bryony McCann
Serena Dillon
Anna I. Shiel
Michael J. Knight
Myra E. Conway
Risto A. Kauppinen
Demitra Tsivos
Elizabeth Coulthard
Source :
Dillon, S E, Tsivos, D, Knight, M, Mccann, B, Pennington, C, Shiel, A I, Conway, M E, Newson, M A, Kauppinen, R A & Coulthard, E J 2017, ' The impact of ageing reveals distinct roles for human dentate gyrus and CA3 in pattern separation and object recognition memory ', Scientific Reports, vol. 7, 14069 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-13853-8, Scientific Reports, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2017), Dillon, S, Tsivos, D, Knight, M, McCann, B, Pennington, C, Newson, M, Conway, M, Shiel, A, Kauppinen, R & Coulthard, L 2017, ' The impact of ageing reveals distinct roles for human dentate gyrus and CA3 in pattern separation and object recognition memory. ', Scientific Reports, vol. 7, 14069 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-13853-8, Scientific Reports
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Both recognition of familiar objects and pattern separation, a process that orthogonalises overlapping events, are critical for effective memory. Evidence is emerging that human pattern separation requires dentate gyrus. Dentate gyrus is intimately connected to CA3 where, in animals, an autoassociative network enables recall of complete memories to underpin object/event recognition. Despite huge motivation to treat age-related human memory disorders, interaction between human CA3 and dentate subfields is difficult to investigate due to small size and proximity. We tested the hypothesis that human dentate gyrus is critical for pattern separation, whereas, CA3 underpins identical object recognition. Using 3 T MR hippocampal subfield volumetry combined with a behavioural pattern separation task, we demonstrate that dentate gyrus volume predicts accuracy and response time during behavioural pattern separation whereas CA3 predicts performance in object recognition memory. Critically, human dentate gyrus volume decreases with age whereas CA3 volume is age-independent. Further, decreased dentate gyrus volume, and no other subfield volume, mediates adverse effects of aging on memory. Thus, we demonstrate distinct roles for CA3 and dentate gyrus in human memory and uncover the variegated effects of human ageing across hippocampal regions. Accurate pinpointing of focal memory-related deficits will allow future targeted treatment for memory loss.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Dillon, S E, Tsivos, D, Knight, M, Mccann, B, Pennington, C, Shiel, A I, Conway, M E, Newson, M A, Kauppinen, R A & Coulthard, E J 2017, ' The impact of ageing reveals distinct roles for human dentate gyrus and CA3 in pattern separation and object recognition memory ', Scientific Reports, vol. 7, 14069 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-13853-8, Scientific Reports, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2017), Dillon, S, Tsivos, D, Knight, M, McCann, B, Pennington, C, Newson, M, Conway, M, Shiel, A, Kauppinen, R & Coulthard, L 2017, ' The impact of ageing reveals distinct roles for human dentate gyrus and CA3 in pattern separation and object recognition memory. ', Scientific Reports, vol. 7, 14069 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-13853-8, Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dccbd0d1db863bf95da51de08c534db5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-13853-8