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Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells

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Dentate Gyrus Granule Cells

Overview

Dentate gyrus granule cells (DGGCs) are small, densely packed excitatory neurons located in the granule cell layer of the dentate gyrus, a key component of the hippocampal formation. These cells represent one of the few neuronal populations capable of adult neurogenesis in the mammalian brain, with new granule cells continuously generated from neural progenitor cells throughout the lifespan. The dentate gyrus itself forms the primary input structure of the hippocampus, receiving major projections from the entorhinal cortex via the perforant path. Granule cells are characterized by their small soma (10-15 micrometers in diameter), extensive dendritic trees that extend into the molecular layer, and axons (mossy fibers) that project exclusively to CA3 pyramidal neurons, creating a one-way information flow through the hippocampal circuit.

Function/Biology

DGGCs function as the primary neurons responsible for pattern separation—a critical computational process that transforms overlapping input patterns from the entorhinal cortex into distinct, non-overlapping representations suitable for hippocampal processing. This sparse coding strategy is facilitated by the large number of granule cells (approximately 1 million per dentate gyrus in humans) relative to the number of entorhinal inputs, creating a highly expansive transformation that maximizes pattern differentiation.

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