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Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells in Alzheimer's Disease

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Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells in Alzheimer's Disease

Overview

Dentate gyrus granule cells (DGGCs) are principal neurons located in the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus, a key hippocampal subregion critical for memory formation and cognitive function. These cells represent a population of neurons that undergo selective vulnerability in Alzheimer's disease (AD), exhibiting morphological changes, reduced dendritic complexity, and functional impairment before widespread neuronal loss occurs in the disease. The dentate gyrus maintains a unique capacity for neurogenesis throughout adult life, and disruption of this process contributes significantly to the cognitive decline characteristic of AD. DGGCs are among the first neurons to show molecular and structural alterations in response to Alzheimer's pathology, making them essential targets for understanding disease mechanisms and potential therapeutic intervention.

Function/Biology

Dentate gyrus granule cells serve as the primary excitatory input neurons of the hippocampus, receiving perforant path projections from the entorhinal cortex and projecting via their mossy fiber axons to CA3 pyramidal neurons. This trisynaptic circuit—entorhinal cortex → dentate gyrus → CA3 → CA1—forms the fundamental neural circuit underlying declarative memory consolidation. DGGCs integrate sensory and contextual information and perform crucial pattern separation functions, enabling discrimination between similar environmental contexts and episodes through sparse, orthogonal encoding patterns.

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