Centre for Integrative Genomics, Université de Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Brain. 2013 May;136(Pt 5):1592-608. doi: 10.1093/brain/awt069.
Astute control of brain activity states is critical for adaptive behaviours and survival. In mammals and birds, electroencephalographic recordings reveal alternating states of wakefulness, slow wave sleep and paradoxical sleep (or rapid eye movement sleep). This control is profoundly impaired in narcolepsy with cataplexy, a disease resulting from the loss of orexin/hypocretin neurotransmitter signalling in the brain. Narcolepsy with cataplexy is characterized by irresistible bouts of sleep during the day, sleep fragmentation during the night and episodes of cataplexy, a sudden loss of muscle tone while awake and experiencing emotions. The neural mechanisms underlying cataplexy are unknown, but commonly thought to involve those of rapid eye movement-sleep atonia, and cataplexy typically is considered as a rapid eye movement sleep disorder. Here we reassess cataplexy in hypocretin (Hcrt, also known as orexin) gene knockout mice. Using a novel video/electroencephalogram double-blind scoring method, we show that cataplexy is not a state per se, as believed previously, but a dynamic, multi-phased process involving a reproducible progression of states. A knockout-specific state and a stereotypical paroxysmal event were introduced to account for signals and electroencephalogram spectral characteristics not seen in wild-type littermates. Cataplexy almost invariably started with a brief phase of wake-like electroencephalogram, followed by a phase featuring high-amplitude irregular theta oscillations, defining an activity profile distinct from paradoxical sleep, referred to as cataplexy-associated state and in the course of which 1.5-2 s high-amplitude, highly regular, hypersynchronous paroxysmal theta bursts (∼7 Hz) occurred. In contrast to cataplexy onset, exit from cataplexy did not show a predictable sequence of activities. Altogether, these data contradict the hypothesis that cataplexy is a state similar to paradoxical sleep, even if long cataplexies may evolve into paradoxical sleep. Although not exclusive to overt cataplexy, cataplexy-associated state and hypersynchronous paroxysmal theta activities are highly enriched during cataplexy in hypocretin/orexin knockout mice. Their occurrence in an independent narcolepsy mouse model, the orexin/ataxin 3 transgenic mouse, undergoing loss of orexin neurons, was confirmed. Importantly, we document for the first time similar paroxysmal theta hypersynchronies (∼4 Hz) during cataplexy in narcoleptic children. Lastly, we show by deep recordings in mice that the cataplexy-associated state and hypersynchronous paroxysmal theta activities are independent of hippocampal theta and involve the frontal cortex. Cataplexy hypersynchronous paroxysmal theta bursts may represent medial prefrontal activity, associated in humans and rodents with reward-driven motor impulse, planning and conflict monitoring.
大脑活动状态的精确控制对于适应行为和生存至关重要。在哺乳动物和鸟类中,脑电图记录显示出清醒、慢波睡眠和矛盾睡眠(或快速眼动睡眠)的交替状态。这种控制在伴有猝倒的嗜睡症中严重受损,这种疾病是由于大脑中食欲素/下丘脑分泌素神经递质信号的丧失引起的。伴有猝倒的嗜睡症的特征是白天不可抗拒的睡眠发作、夜间睡眠碎片化和猝倒发作,即清醒时突然失去肌肉张力并伴有情绪。猝倒的神经机制尚不清楚,但通常被认为涉及快速眼动睡眠弛缓,并且猝倒通常被认为是快速眼动睡眠障碍。在这里,我们重新评估了下丘脑分泌素(Hcrt,也称为食欲素)基因敲除小鼠中的猝倒。使用一种新的视频/脑电图双盲评分方法,我们表明猝倒不是一种状态,如以前认为的那样,而是一个动态的、多阶段的过程,涉及到状态的可重复进展。引入了一种特定于敲除的状态和一种刻板的阵发性事件,以解释在野生型同窝仔鼠中未观察到的信号和脑电图频谱特征。猝倒几乎总是从短暂的清醒样脑电图阶段开始,然后是具有高振幅不规则θ振荡的阶段,定义了一种与矛盾睡眠不同的活动特征,称为猝倒相关状态,在此过程中,出现 1.5-2 秒的高振幅、高度规则、超同步阵发性θ爆发(约 7 Hz)。与猝倒发作相比,猝倒发作的结束没有显示出可预测的活动序列。总的来说,这些数据与猝倒类似于矛盾睡眠状态的假设相矛盾,即使长猝倒可能演变为矛盾睡眠。尽管不限于明显的猝倒,但在下丘脑分泌素/食欲素基因敲除小鼠中,猝倒相关状态和超同步阵发性θ活动在明显的猝倒中高度丰富。在另一种独立的嗜睡症模型,即下丘脑分泌素/ataxin 3 转基因小鼠中,该模型发生下丘脑分泌素神经元丧失,也证实了这些状态和活动的发生。重要的是,我们首次在伴有猝倒的儿童中记录到类似的阵发性θ超同步性(约 4 Hz)。最后,我们通过小鼠的深部记录表明,猝倒相关状态和超同步阵发性θ活动与海马θ无关,涉及前额皮质。猝倒发作时的超同步阵发性θ爆发可能代表内侧前额叶活动,在人类和啮齿动物中与奖赏驱动的运动冲动、计划和冲突监测有关。