Recruitment and replacement of hippocampal neurons in young and adult chickadees: an addition to the theory of hippocampal learning.
- 23 January 1996
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (2), 714-718
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.2.714
Abstract
We used [3H]thymidine to document the birth of neurons and their recruitment into the hippocampal complex (HC) of juvenile (4.5 months old) and adult blackcapped chickadees (Parus atricapillus) living in their natural surroundings. Birds received a single dose of [3H]thymidine in August and were recaptured and killed 6 weeks later, in early October. All brains were stained with Cresyl violet, a Nissl stain. The boundaries of the HC were defined by reference to the ventricular wall, the brain surface, or differences in neuronal packing density. The HC of juveniles was as large as or larger than that of adults and packing density of HC neurons was 31% higher in juveniles than in adults. Almost all of the 3H-labeled HC neurons were found in a 350-m-wide layer of tissue adjacent to the lateral ventricle. Within this layer the fraction of 3H-labeled neurons was 50% higher in juveniles than in adults. We conclude that the HC of juvenile chickadees recruits more neurons and has more neurons than that of adults. We speculate that juveniles encounter greater environmental novelty than adults and that the greater number of HC neurons found in juveniles allows them to learn more than adults. At a more general level, we suggest that (i) long-term learning alters HC neurons irreversibly; (ii) sustained hippocampal learning requires the periodic replacement of HC neurons; (iii) memories coded by hippocampal neurons are transferred elsewhere before the neurons are replaced.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adult neurogenesis is regulated by adrenal steroids in the dentate gyrusNeuroscience, 1994
- The hippocampus—what does it do?Behavioral and Neural Biology, 1992
- Proliferation “hot spots” in adult avian ventricular zone reveal radial cell divisionNeuron, 1990
- Migration of young neurons in adult avian brainNature, 1988
- The long and the short of long–term memory—a molecular frameworkNature, 1986
- Ultrastructural characterization of synaptic terminals formed on newly generated neurons in a song control nucleus of the adult canary forebrainJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1985
- Regressive Events in NeurogenesisScience, 1984
- Homing Behavior of Pigeons after Telencephalic AblationsBrain, Behavior and Evolution, 1984
- Neurogenesis in the Adult Rat: Electron Microscopic Analysis of Light RadioautographsScience, 1977
- The telencephalon, diencephalon, and mesencephalon of the canary, Serinus canaria, in stereotaxic coordinatesJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1974