Ribeiro Sidarta, Nicolelis Miguel A L
Department of Neurobiology, Duke University Medical Center, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Learn Mem. 2004 Nov-Dec;11(6):686-96. doi: 10.1101/lm.75604.
In mammals and birds, long episodes of nondreaming sleep ("slow-wave" sleep, SW) are followed by short episodes of dreaming sleep ("rapid-eye-movement" sleep, REM). Both SW and REM sleep have been shown to be important for the consolidation of newly acquired memories, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here we review electrophysiological and molecular data suggesting that SW and REM sleep play distinct and complementary roles on memory consolidation: While postacquisition neuronal reverberation depends mainly on SW sleep episodes, transcriptional events able to promote long-lasting memory storage are only triggered during ensuing REM sleep. We also discuss evidence that the wake-sleep cycle promotes a postsynaptic propagation of memory traces away from the neural sites responsible for initial encoding. Taken together, our results suggest that basic molecular and cellular mechanisms underlie the reverberation, storage, and propagation of memory traces during sleep. We propose that these three processes alone may account for several important properties of memory consolidation over time, such as deeper memory encoding within the cerebral cortex, incremental learning several nights after memory acquisition, and progressive hippocampal disengagement.
在哺乳动物和鸟类中,长时间的非快速眼动睡眠(“慢波”睡眠,SW)之后是短时间的快速眼动睡眠(“快速眼动”睡眠,REM)。研究表明,慢波睡眠和快速眼动睡眠对于巩固新获得的记忆都很重要,但其潜在机制仍不清楚。在这里,我们回顾了电生理和分子数据,这些数据表明慢波睡眠和快速眼动睡眠在记忆巩固中发挥着不同但互补的作用:虽然获取后神经元的回响主要依赖于慢波睡眠阶段,但能够促进长期记忆存储的转录事件仅在随后的快速眼动睡眠期间触发。我们还讨论了一些证据,即清醒 - 睡眠周期促进记忆痕迹从负责初始编码的神经部位进行突触后传播。综上所述,我们的结果表明,睡眠期间记忆痕迹的回响、存储和传播存在基本的分子和细胞机制。我们提出,仅这三个过程就可能解释随着时间推移记忆巩固的几个重要特性,例如大脑皮层内更深层次的记忆编码、记忆获取数晚后的渐进式学习以及海马体的逐渐脱离。