Neuroscience Division, School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff CF10 3AX, United Kingdom, Unité Mixte de Recherche 7102 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Université Paris 6, 75005 Paris, France, Ernst Strüngmann Institute for Neuroscience in Cooperation with Max Planck Society, 60528 Frankfurt, Germany, Physiology and Biochemistry Department, Malta University, 2080 Malta, and Merck & Company Inc., West Point, Pennsylvania 19486.
J Neurosci. 2013 Dec 11;33(50):19599-610. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3169-13.2013.
Slow waves represent one of the prominent EEG signatures of non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep and are thought to play an important role in the cellular and network plasticity that occurs during this behavioral state. These slow waves of natural sleep are currently considered to be exclusively generated by intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms within neocortical territories, although a role for the thalamus in this key physiological rhythm has been suggested but never demonstrated. Combining neuronal ensemble recordings, microdialysis, and optogenetics, here we show that the block of the thalamic output to the neocortex markedly (up to 50%) decreases the frequency of slow waves recorded during non-REM sleep in freely moving, naturally sleeping-waking rats. A smaller volume of thalamic inactivation than during sleep is required for observing similar effects on EEG slow waves recorded during anesthesia, a condition in which both bursts and single action potentials of thalamocortical neurons are almost exclusively dependent on T-type calcium channels. Thalamic inactivation more strongly reduces spindles than slow waves during both anesthesia and natural sleep. Moreover, selective excitation of thalamocortical neurons strongly entrains EEG slow waves in a narrow frequency band (0.75-1.5 Hz) only when thalamic T-type calcium channels are functionally active. These results demonstrate that the thalamus finely tunes the frequency of slow waves during non-REM sleep and anesthesia, and thus provide the first conclusive evidence that a dynamic interplay of the neocortical and thalamic oscillators of slow waves is required for the full expression of this key physiological EEG rhythm.
慢波是非快速眼动(非 REM)睡眠的主要脑电图特征之一,被认为在这种行为状态下发生的细胞和网络可塑性中发挥重要作用。这些自然睡眠的慢波目前被认为仅由新皮层区域内的内在和突触机制产生,尽管有人提出但从未证明过丘脑在这种关键生理节律中的作用。通过神经元集合记录、微透析和光遗传学相结合,我们在这里表明,阻断丘脑对新皮层的输出会显著(高达 50%)降低自由移动、自然睡眠-觉醒大鼠非 REM 睡眠期间记录的慢波频率。与睡眠期间相比,在麻醉期间观察到对 EEG 慢波的类似影响所需的丘脑失活体积较小,在麻醉期间,丘脑皮质神经元的爆发和单个动作电位几乎完全依赖于 T 型钙通道。与麻醉和自然睡眠期间的慢波相比,丘脑失活更强烈地减少纺锤波。此外,只有当丘脑 T 型钙通道具有功能活性时,丘脑皮质神经元的选择性兴奋才能在窄频带(0.75-1.5 Hz)中强烈诱发 EEG 慢波。这些结果表明,丘脑在非 REM 睡眠和麻醉期间精细地调整慢波的频率,从而提供了第一个确凿的证据,即慢波的新皮层和丘脑振荡器之间的动态相互作用是这种关键生理 EEG 节律完全表达所必需的。