📗 Cite This Artifact
Dentate Gyrus
Introduction
Dentate Gyrus is an important component in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
Overview
The dentate gyrus (DG) is a V-shaped structure within the hippocampal formation that serves as the primary gateway for cortical information entering the hippocampal circuit. It receives input from the [/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex](/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex) via the [/mechanisms/perforant-path](/mechanisms/perforant-path) and projects to hippocampal area [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) through its [/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway](/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway) axons. The dentate gyrus is one of only two brain regions where adult [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) — the birth and functional integration of new neurons — occurs throughout life in mammals, making it a uniquely plastic structure with profound implications for learning, memory, and [neurodegenerative disease [@kandel2013]. [@amaral2007]
Introduction
Dentate Gyrus is an important component in the neurobiology of neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides detailed information about its structure, function, and role in disease processes.
Overview
The dentate gyrus (DG) is a V-shaped structure within the hippocampal formation that serves as the primary gateway for cortical information entering the hippocampal circuit. It receives input from the [/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex](/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex) via the [/mechanisms/perforant-path](/mechanisms/perforant-path) and projects to hippocampal area [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) through its [/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway](/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway) axons. The dentate gyrus is one of only two brain regions where adult [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) — the birth and functional integration of new neurons — occurs throughout life in mammals, making it a uniquely plastic structure with profound implications for learning, memory, and [neurodegenerative disease [@kandel2013]. [@amaral2007]
In [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), the dentate gyrus shows disrupted [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis), altered granule cell excitability, and progressive degeneration that correlates with episodic memory impairment. The granule cells of the DG are essential for pattern separation — the computational process of distinguishing similar but distinct memories — and their dysfunction underlies the characteristic memory confusion seen in early [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) [@amaral2007]. Recent studies have demonstrated that adult hippocampal [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) is impaired in preclinical AD, potentially preceding overt cognitive decline by years [@sorensen2024]. [@sorensen2024]
--- [@yassa2011]
Anatomy and Cytoarchitecture
Laminar Organization
The dentate gyrus has a three-layered structure: [@gage2000]
| Layer | Cell Types | Function | [@eriksson1998]
|-------|-----------|----------| [@spalding2013]
| Molecular layer | Dendrites of granule cells; [/mechanisms/perforant-path](/mechanisms/perforant-path) axon terminals; interneuron dendrites | Receives [/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex](/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex) input (outer 2/3) and commissural/associational input (inner 1/3) | [@witter2007]
| Granule cell layer (GCL) | ~1 million densely packed granule cells (per hemisphere in humans); adult-born immature neurons | Principal excitatory neurons; pattern separation computation | [@scharfman2007]
| Polymorphic layer (hilus) | Mossy cells; basket cells; hilar interneurons; [/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway](/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway) axons | Local circuit modulation; recurrent excitation | [@heinemann2009]
Subgranular Zone
The subgranular zone (SGZ) lies at the interface between the granule cell layer and the hilus. It is one of the two canonical neurogenic niches in the adult mammalian brain (the other being the [/brain-regions/subventricular-zone](/brain-regions/subventricular-zone)). The SGZ contains: [@allen]
- Neural stem cells (NSCs): Radial glia-like type 1 cells (glial-fibrillary-acidic-protein+, Nestin+, Sox2+)
- Transit-amplifying progenitors: Type 2 cells (proliferating, Tbr2+/DCX+)
- Neuroblasts: Type 3 cells (DCX+, PSA-NCAM+)
- Immature neurons: Post-mitotic, migrating into the GCL, forming synapses over 4–8 weeks
Hippocampal Circuit Position
The dentate gyrus occupies a critical position in the trisynaptic hippocampal circuit: [@brainspan]
This serial architecture places the DG as a critical filter and encoder of cortical information before it reaches the hippocampal associative networks. [@neurosynth]
--- [@gage2009]
Normal Function
Pattern Separation
The dentate gyrus performs pattern separation — transforming similar input patterns into more distinct output representations [@yassa2011]. This computational function is enabled by:
- Sparse coding: Only ~2–5% of granule cells are active at any given time, creating highly orthogonal representations
- Large expansion ratio: ~300,000 [/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex](/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex) layer II neurons project to ~1,000,000 granule cells, enabling decorrelation
- Strong inhibitory control: pv-interneurons and basket cells maintain sparse activity through powerful feedforward and feedback inhibition
Pattern separation is essential for episodic memory — distinguishing where you parked your car today versus yesterday, or discriminating between similar faces, places, and events.
Adult Neurogenesis
Adult hippocampal [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) (AHN) in the dentate gyrus subgranular zone produces approximately 700 new neurons per day in the adult human [/brain-regions/hippocampus](/brain-regions/hippocampus), though this rate declines substantially with age [@gage2000]. Adult-born granule cells contribute to DG function through:
- Enhanced plasticity: Immature neurons (4–6 weeks old) have lower thresholds for [/mechanisms/long-term-potentiation](/mechanisms/long-term-potentiation) and higher excitability than mature granule cells
- Pattern separation: Young neurons improve the discrimination of similar memories and contexts
- Memory encoding: Integration of new neurons allows the DG to encode new memories without overwriting old ones (memory resolution)
- Mood regulation: AHN contributes to the antidepressant effects of exercise, SSRIs, and environmental enrichment
Mossy Fiber System
Granule cell axons ([/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway](/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway)s) form powerful "detonator" synapses on [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) pyramidal neurons, each containing multiple release sites and capable of reliably driving [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) cell firing. This strong unidirectional drive ensures that DG pattern-separated representations are faithfully transmitted to the [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) autoassociative network.
Vulnerability in Neurodegenerative Disease
Alzheimer's Disease
The dentate gyrus shows progressive pathology in [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) with distinct features:
Impaired [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis):
- [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease) patients have significantly reduced numbers of immature neurons (DCX+ cells) and proliferating progenitors in the SGZ compared to age-matched controls [@sorensen2024]
- Reduced AHN occurs early in the disease course — transcription factor alterations and chromatin accessibility changes in neurogenic cells are detectable at Braak stage II, before clinical symptoms appear [@eriksson1998]
- Depletion of adult [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) exacerbates cognitive deficits in AD models by compromising hippocampal inhibition [@spalding2013]
- [/proteins/amyloid-beta](/proteins/amyloid-beta) oligomers impair neural progenitor proliferation and the survival and maturation of newborn neurons
- Hyperexcitability of DG granule cells occurs in early [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), driven by reduced [/mechanisms/gabaergic-dysfunction](/mechanisms/gabaergic-dysfunction) inhibition and [/proteins/amyloid-beta](/proteins/amyloid-beta)-mediated effects on ion channels
- [/proteins/tau-protein](/proteins/tau) pathology in the DG disrupts [/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway](/mechanisms/mossy-fiber-pathway) connectivity to [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons)
- Pattern separation deficits are among the earliest cognitive impairments detectable in prodromal [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease), correlatable with DG dysfunction on high-resolution fMRI [@amaral2007]
- Unlike [/cell-types/ca1-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca1-pyramidal-neurons), which show early neuronal loss, DG granule cells are relatively resistant to cell death in AD
- However, DG dysfunction (hyperexcitability, reduced [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis), synaptic loss) contributes substantially to memory impairment even without massive cell loss
- The [/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex](/brain-regions/entorhinal-cortex) → DG [/mechanisms/perforant-path](/mechanisms/perforant-path) degenerates early in AD, disconnecting the DG from its cortical input Braak stages I–II
- Enhancement of AHN can protect against AD pathology and ameliorate memory deficits in both rodent models and human studies [@sorensen2024]
- Exercise, environmental enrichment, and [/proteins/bdnf-protein](/proteins/bdnf-protein) signaling promote DG [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) and improve cognitive function in AD models
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
Although not a neurodegenerative disease, [/diseases/temporal-lobe-epilepsy](/diseases/temporal-lobe-epilepsy) causes dramatic DG reorganization:
- Aberrant [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) with ectopic granule cell migration
- Mossy fiber sprouting creating recurrent excitatory circuits
- These changes provide insights into how disrupted DG plasticity can cause circuit dysfunction
[/diseases/parkinsons-disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)'s Disease
parkinsons affects DG function through:
- Reduced dopaminergic input from the [/brain-regions/ventral-tegmental-area](/brain-regions/ventral-tegmental-area) impairs [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis)
- [/proteins/alpha-synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein) pathology in the [/brain-regions/hippocampus](/brain-regions/hippocampus) correlates with PD dementia
- Cognitive decline in PD involves DG-dependent pattern separation deficits
Frontotemporal Dementia
ftd with hippocampal sclerosis shows severe DG granule cell loss, particularly in late and [/proteins/tardbp](/proteins/tardbp) proteinopathy variants.
Molecular Regulation of Adult Neurogenesis
Key signaling pathways regulating DG [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) and their relevance to neurodegeneration:
| Pathway | Role in Neurogenesis | Disease Relevance |
|---------|---------------------|-------------------|
| [/proteins/bdnf-protein](/proteins/bdnf-protein)/TrkB | Promotes progenitor proliferation and newborn neuron survival | Reduced in AD [/brain-regions/hippocampus](/brain-regions/hippocampus) |
| Wnt/β-catenin | Maintains NSC self-renewal and neuronal fate commitment | Inhibited by [/proteins/gsk3-beta](/proteins/gsk3-beta) hyperactivity in AD |
| Notch | Maintains NSC quiescence; inhibition promotes differentiation | Dysregulated in AD |
| 5-HT/5-HT1A | Promotes progenitor proliferation (basis for SSRI antidepressant effects) | Raphe degeneration reduces serotonergic input |
| [/mechanisms/mtor-signaling-pathway](/mechanisms/mtor-signaling-pathway) | Regulates NSC activation and metabolic programming | Overactivated in AD; inhibition with [/therapeutics/rapamycin](/therapeutics/rapamycin) may restore [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) |
| Insulin/IGF-1 | Promotes NSC proliferation and neuroblast survival | Insulin resistance impairs DG [/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis](/mechanisms/hippocampal-neurogenesis) |
Research Methods and Biomarkers
In Vivo Imaging
- High-resolution fMRI (hr-fMRI): 1.5mm isotropic resolution enables assessment of DG vs. [/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca3-pyramidal-neurons) vs. CA1 activity during pattern separation tasks [@amaral2007]
- Cerebral blood volume (CBV): DG-specific CBV measured by steady-state gadolinium-enhanced MRI serves as a proxy for DG neuronal activity
- ¹⁸F-FDG PET: DG hypometabolism detectable in prodromal [/diseases/alzheimers-disease](/diseases/alzheimers-disease)
Postmortem Markers
- DCX (doublecortin): Marker of immature neurons; quantification reveals AHN levels
- Ki-67: Proliferation marker for progenitor cells in the SGZ
- PSA-NCAM: Marker of migrating neuroblasts
- [/cell-types/ca1-pyramidal-neurons](/cell-types/ca1-pyramidal-neurons)
- [/proteins/bdnf-protein](/proteins/bdnf-protein)
External Links
- Allen Human Brain Atlas: Dentate Gyrus
- Allen Mouse Brain Atlas: Hippocampal Formation
- BrainSpan: Dentate Gyrus Development
Background
The study of Dentate Gyrus has evolved significantly over the past decades. Research in this area has revealed important insights into the underlying of neurodegeneration and continues to drive therapeutic development.
Historical context and key discoveries in this field have shaped our current understanding and will continue to guide future research directions.
Brain Atlas Resources
[^
References
[DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2013.05.002](https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2013.05.002)
[DOI:10.1016/S0079-6123(07](07])
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Dentate Gyrus discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Dentate Gyrus discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
▸Metadataorigin_type: v1_polymorphic_backfill
| slug | brain-regions-dentate-gyrus |
| kg_node_id | None |
| entity_type | brain |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-a2df47f32c5a |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'brain-regions-dentate-gyrus'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
No provenance edges found
Use ?embed=1 to load the artifact without SciDEX chrome — suitable for iframing into wiki pages or external sites.
<iframe src="http://scidex.ai/artifact/wiki-brain-regions-dentate-gyrus?embed=1" width="100%" height="600" style="border:0;border-radius:8px"></iframe>
[Dentate Gyrus](http://scidex.ai/artifact/wiki-brain-regions-dentate-gyrus)
http://scidex.ai/artifact/wiki-brain-regions-dentate-gyrus