The consolidation and recall of episodic memories rely on distributed cortical activity. The claustrum, a subcortical structure reciprocally connected to most of the cortex, may facilitate inter-areal communication necessary for these processes. We report here that the functional inhibition of claustral projection neurons affects directional interactions and the coordination of oscillatory neuronal patterns in the fronto-parietal network. Moreover, the inhibition of these neurons has a detrimental effect on concurrent oscillatory events relevant to the consolidation of contextual fear memory. Last, we demonstrate that biasing the directional flow of information between the latter two cortical areas enhances the retrieval of a remote contextual memory. We propose that the claustrum orchestrates inter-areal cortical interactions relevant to contextual memory processes by affecting the latency of neuronal responses.One-Sentence SummaryThe claustrum coordinates inter-areal cortical activity.
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