Department of Physiology, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo Tokyo, Japan ; Japan Science and Technology Agency, CREST Tokyo, Japan.
Front Neural Circuits. 2013 Aug 14;7:132. doi: 10.3389/fncir.2013.00132. eCollection 2013.
Plastic changes in neuronal circuits often occur in association with specific behavioral states. In this review, we focus on an emerging view that neuronal circuits in the olfactory system are reorganized along the wake-sleep cycle. Olfaction is crucial to sustaining the animals' life, and odor-guided behaviors have to be newly acquired or updated to successfully cope with a changing odor world. It is therefore likely that neuronal circuits in the olfactory system are highly plastic and undergo repeated reorganization in daily life. A remarkably plastic feature of the olfactory system is that newly generated neurons are continually integrated into neuronal circuits of the olfactory bulb (OB) throughout life. New neurons in the OB undergo an extensive selection process, during which many are eliminated by apoptosis for the fine tuning of neuronal circuits. The life and death decision of new neurons occurs extensively during a short time window of sleep after food consumption (postprandial sleep), a typical daily olfactory behavior. We review recent studies that explain how olfactory information is transferred between the OB and the olfactory cortex (OC) along the course of the wake-sleep cycle. Olfactory sensory input is effectively transferred from the OB to the OC during waking, while synchronized top-down inputs from the OC to the OB are promoted during the slow-wave sleep. We discuss possible neuronal circuit mechanisms for the selection of new neurons in the OB, which involves the encoding of olfactory sensory inputs and memory trace formation during waking and internally generated activities in the OC and OB during subsequent sleep. The plastic changes in the OB and OC are well coordinated along the course of olfactory behavior during wakefulness and postbehavioral rest and sleep. We therefore propose that the olfactory system provides an excellent model in which to understand behavioral state-dependent plastic mechanisms of the neuronal circuits in the brain.
神经元回路的可塑性变化通常与特定的行为状态相关。在这篇综述中,我们重点关注一个新出现的观点,即嗅觉系统中的神经元回路沿着清醒-睡眠周期进行重组。嗅觉对于维持动物的生命至关重要,气味引导的行为必须被重新获得或更新,以成功应对不断变化的气味世界。因此,嗅觉系统中的神经元回路很可能具有高度的可塑性,并在日常生活中经历反复的重组。嗅觉系统的一个显著的可塑性特征是,新生成的神经元在整个生命过程中不断地整合到嗅球(OB)的神经元回路中。OB 中的新神经元经历了一个广泛的选择过程,在此期间,许多神经元通过凋亡被消除,以实现神经元回路的微调。新神经元的生死决定在进食后(餐后)的短睡眠窗口中广泛发生,这是一种典型的日常嗅觉行为。我们综述了最近的研究,这些研究解释了嗅觉信息如何在清醒-睡眠周期中沿着 OB 和嗅觉皮层(OC)之间传递。在清醒状态下,嗅觉感觉输入有效地从 OB 传递到 OC,而同步的自上而下的输入则在慢波睡眠期间从 OC 促进到 OB。我们讨论了 OB 中选择新神经元的可能神经元回路机制,这涉及到在清醒时嗅觉感觉输入的编码和记忆痕迹形成,以及在随后的睡眠中 OC 和 OB 中的内源性活动。OB 和 OC 的可塑性变化在清醒时和行为后休息和睡眠期间的嗅觉行为过程中得到了很好的协调。因此,我们提出嗅觉系统为理解大脑中神经元回路的行为状态依赖性可塑性机制提供了一个极好的模型。