Sakai K, Crochet S
INSERM U480, Department of Experimental Medicine, Claude Bernard University, Lyon 1, 8 Avenue Rockefeller, 69373 Lyon Cedex 08, France.
Neuroscience. 2001;104(4):1141-55. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(01)00103-8.
Using extracellular single unit recording, either alone or in combination with microdialysis application of drugs, we examined the characteristics of presumed serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons during wake-sleep states in the freely moving cat. Recordings were made from a total of 272 neurons in the dorsal raphe nucleus. Of these, 240 (88%) were classified as serotonergic on the basis of their typical long-duration action potential, slow discharge activity, and reduced spontaneous discharge rate during paradoxical sleep compared to during slow-wave sleep. An inhibitory response to serotonergic agonists and a slow conduction velocity were seen in all neurons of this type tested or identified by stimulation of the main ascending serotonergic pathway. These presumed serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons could be subdivided into two typical previously identified groups (types I-A and I-B) and four atypical new groups (types I-C, II-A, II-B, and II-C) according to differences in firing patterns during wake-sleep states. The typical neurons were evenly distributed in the dorsal raphe nucleus and their activity was related to the level of behavioral arousal, since they discharged regularly at a high rate during waking and at progressively slower rates during slow-wave sleep, and ceased firing either during slow-wave sleep with ponto-geniculo-occipital waves and paradoxical sleep (type I-A) or only during paradoxical sleep (type I-B). In contrast, the atypical subgroups were unevenly distributed in the dorsal raphe nucleus and exhibited firing patterns distinct from those of the typical neurons, such as sustained tonic activity during paradoxical sleep (types I-C and II-C) or showing their highest rate of tonic discharge during slow-wave sleep, with suppression of discharge during both waking and paradoxical sleep (type II-B). From these data we suggest that presumed serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons play different roles in behavioral state control and that there is functional topographic organization in the dorsal raphe nucleus.
我们采用细胞外单单位记录技术,单独或与药物微透析应用相结合,研究了自由活动猫在睡眠-觉醒状态下假定的5-羟色胺能中缝背核神经元的特征。共记录了中缝背核中的272个神经元。其中,240个(88%)根据其典型的长时程动作电位、缓慢的放电活动以及与慢波睡眠相比在异相睡眠期间自发放电率降低,被归类为5-羟色胺能神经元。在通过刺激主要上行5-羟色胺能通路测试或鉴定的所有此类神经元中,均观察到对5-羟色胺能激动剂的抑制反应和缓慢的传导速度。根据睡眠-觉醒状态下放电模式的差异,这些假定的5-羟色胺能中缝背核神经元可细分为两个典型的先前已鉴定组(I-A型和I-B型)和四个非典型的新组(I-C型、II-A型、II-B型和II-C型)。典型神经元均匀分布在中缝背核中,其活动与行为觉醒水平相关,因为它们在清醒时以高频率有规律地放电,在慢波睡眠期间放电频率逐渐减慢,并且在伴有脑桥-膝状体-枕叶波的慢波睡眠和异相睡眠期间(I-A型)或仅在异相睡眠期间(I-B型)停止放电。相比之下,非典型亚组在中缝背核中分布不均匀,并且表现出与典型神经元不同的放电模式,例如在异相睡眠期间持续的紧张性活动(I-C型和II-C型),或者在慢波睡眠期间表现出最高的紧张性放电频率,而在清醒和异相睡眠期间放电均受到抑制(II-B型)。根据这些数据,我们认为假定的5-羟色胺能中缝背核神经元在行为状态控制中发挥不同作用,并且中缝背核中存在功能地形组织。