Connectomic reconstruction from hippocampal CA3 reveals spatially graded mossy fiber inputs and selective feedforward inhibition to pyramidal cells
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The mossy fiber (MF) connections to pyramidal cells in hippocampal CA3 are hypothesized to participate in pattern separation and memory encoding, yet no large-scale neuronal wiring diagram exists for these connections. We assembled a 3D electron microscopy volume (∼1×1×0.1mm 3 ) from mouse hippocampal CA3. By proofreading and automated segmentation, we reconstructed and classified all soma-containing neurons—including 1,815 pyramidal cells and 229 inhibitory cells—and over 55,000 MFs. Pyramidal cells receive more numerous MF inputs along a proximodistal gradient. Some distal cells show surprisingly high convergence via relatively small terminals with fewer vesicles. Pyramidal cells share significantly more MF inputs than networks randomized by degree-preserving swap, and are better approximated by networks randomized by proximity-preserving swap. We identify a feedforward inhibitory circuit from MFs via perisomatic interneurons that selectively target a pyramidal subtype. We demonstrated large-scale mapping across levels in the hippocampus—from circuits to cell types to vesicles. The dataset is shared through Pyr, an online platform for hippocampal connectomics.