27The hippocampal place cells encode spatial representation but it remains unclear how they store 28 concurrent positive or negative experiences. Here, we report on place field reconfiguration in 29 response to an innately aversive odor trimethylthiazoline (TMT). The advantage of TMT is the 30 absence of learning curve required for associative fear conditioning. Our study investigated if 31 CA1 place cells, recorded from behaving rats, remap randomly or if their reconfiguration 32 depends on the location of the aversive stimulus perception. Exposure to TMT increased the 33 amplitude of hippocampal beta oscillations in two arms of a maze (TMT arms). We found that 34 a population of place cells with fields located outside the TMT arms increased their activity 35 (extra-field spiking) in the TMT arms during the aversive episodes. These cells exhibited 36 significant shift of the center of mass towards the TMT arms in the subsequent post-TMT 37 recording. The induction of extra-field plasticity was mediated by the basolateral amygdala 38 complex (BLA). Photostimulation of the BLA triggered aversive behavior, synchronized 39 response of hippocampal local field oscillations, augmented theta rhythm amplitude and 40 increased the spiking of place cells for the first 100ms after the light delivery. This occurred 41only for the extra-field-but not for intra-field spikes. Optogenetic BLA-triggered an increase 42 in extra-field spiking activity correlated to the degree of place field plasticity in the post-ChR2 43 recording session. Our findings demonstrate that the increased extra-field activity during 44 aversive episodes mediates the degree of subsequent field plasticity. 45 46 47 48 49 50 Introduction 51Hippocampus temporally encodes representations of spatial context-dependent experiences 52 (Knierim, 2003) and these memory traces are functionally strengthened in the cortical areas for 53 long-term recollection (Nadel and Moscovitch, 1997; Kitamura et al., 2009; Tayler et al., 2013; 54 Denny et al., 2014). Current theories propose that memory of spatial location is encoded by 55 hippocampal place cells (O'Keefe and Nadel, 1978), but there is scarce information how these 56 neurons encode non-spatial information such as aversive episodes. We know that aversion 57 evokes place field remapping (Moita et al., 2004; Kim et al., 2015) where a subset of neurons 58 in hippocampal area CA1 change their preferred firing locations in response to predator odor 59 (Wang et al., 2012). However, it is still unclear which neurons remap to encode fearful 60 experience and which neurons preserve their spatial fields. Here, we examined the principles 61 governing aversion-induced place field remapping. We tested the hypothesis that the place cells 62 remapping depends on the spatial location of the aversive stimulus perception. The evaluation 63 of change of place field center of mass (ΔCOM) is the most sensitive indicator of experience-64 dependent place field place field reconfiguration (Mehta et al., 1997; Knierim, 2002; Lee et a...