Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2013 Jun;109(11):2732-8. doi: 10.1152/jn.00695.2012. Epub 2013 Mar 13.
During sleep, changes in brain rhythms and neuromodulator levels in cortex modify the properties of individual neurons and the network as a whole. In principle, network-level interactions during sleep can be studied by observing covariation in spontaneous activity between neurons. Spontaneous activity, however, reflects only a portion of the effective functional connectivity that is activated by external and internal inputs (e.g., sensory stimulation, motor behavior, and mental activity), and it has been shown that neural responses are less correlated during external sensory stimulation than during spontaneous activity. Here, we took advantage of the unique property that the auditory cortex continues to respond to sounds during sleep and used external acoustic stimuli to activate cortical networks for studying neural interactions during sleep. We found that during slow-wave sleep (SWS), local (neuron-neuron) correlations are not reduced by acoustic stimulation remaining higher than in wakefulness and rapid eye movement sleep and remaining similar to spontaneous activity correlations. This high level of correlations during SWS complements previous work finding elevated global (local field potential-local field potential) correlations during sleep. Contrary to the prediction that slow oscillations in SWS would increase neural correlations during spontaneous activity, we found little change in neural correlations outside of periods of acoustic stimulation. Rather, these findings suggest that functional connections recruited in sound processing are modified during SWS and that slow rhythms, which in general are suppressed by sensory stimulation, are not the sole mechanism leading to elevated network correlations during sleep.
在睡眠期间,大脑节律和皮层神经调质水平的变化会改变单个神经元和整个网络的特性。原则上,可以通过观察神经元之间自发活动的协变来研究睡眠期间的网络级相互作用。然而,自发活动仅反映了由外部和内部输入(例如感觉刺激、运动行为和心理活动)激活的有效功能连接的一部分,并且已经表明,在外部感觉刺激期间,神经反应的相关性低于自发活动期间。在这里,我们利用听觉皮层在睡眠期间继续对声音做出反应的独特特性,并使用外部声刺激来激活皮层网络,以研究睡眠期间的神经相互作用。我们发现,在慢波睡眠(SWS)期间,局部(神经元-神经元)相关性不受声刺激的影响,其相关性仍高于觉醒和快速眼动睡眠期间,并且与自发活动相关性相似。SWS 期间的这种高相关性补充了先前的工作,即发现在睡眠期间全局(局部场电位-局部场电位)相关性升高。与 SWS 中的慢波振荡会增加自发活动期间神经相关性的预测相反,我们发现,在声刺激期间之外,神经相关性几乎没有变化。相反,这些发现表明,在声音处理过程中招募的功能连接在 SWS 期间发生了变化,并且一般来说,慢节律被感觉刺激抑制,并不是导致睡眠期间网络相关性升高的唯一机制。