6° ± 3.6°, Selleckchem Alectinib clearly lower than the mean for changes in individual cells (comparison of frequency distributions: χ2 = 37.2, degrees of freedom = 9, p < 0.001; Figure 3B versus Figure 3C). The maintained differences in firing direction were also apparent in circular correlations of the angular
distribution of firing rate between simultaneously recorded cell pairs. Circular correlations between cell pairs were calculated for each of the two recording trials with at least three simultaneously recorded cells. The directional correlation of a cell pair was highly correlated between trial 1 and trial 2 (data set with ten cell pairs: Pearson product-moment correlation, r = 0.95; data set with three cell pairs: r = 0.79). Thus, even though the head direction cells displayed low stability before eye opening, the ensemble of head direction cells drifted in a coherent manner. These findings show that head direction cells are widely present in parahippocampal areas well before rat pups open their eyes. The directional tuning of these cells is unstable, Serine Protease inhibitor however, in that peak firing directions drift over the course of minutes in individual trials and change completely between discrete trials. Despite this instability, simultaneously recorded cells maintain relative
firing directions, suggesting that a directional map is already present, although anchoring to an external reference frame has not been established. The fact that cells exhibit directional firing before eye opening is consistent with data from adult animals showing that head direction cells maintain directional tuning in complete darkness even though the preferred tuning direction
drifts over extended time intervals [13]. Recordings from adult animals further demonstrate that head direction cells use external visual landmarks to determine firing direction. Rotation of a visual cue card, for example, leads to a corresponding rotation of firing direction on the subsequent trial [14]. The present findings extend these observations by showing (1) that head direction cells DCLK1 develop independently of both vision and outbound navigational experience in young rat pups and (2) that young pups are able to compute instantaneous direction based on integration of angular movement alone. Furthermore, when visual input becomes available at P14–P15, this information is used to calibrate firing direction almost instantly, suggesting that anchoring of directional preferences to the external world can proceed with minimal learning. The relative independence of vision points to alternative sources of sensory input, such as vestibular information, as more important for the process of updating firing in head direction cells.