Oyanedel Carlos N, Binder Sonja, Kelemen Eduard, Petersen Kimberley, Born Jan, Inostroza Marion
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany.
Department of Neuroendocrinology, University of Lübeck, 23538 Lübeck, Germany.
Behav Brain Res. 2014 Dec 15;275:126-30. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2014.09.008. Epub 2014 Sep 10.
Our previous experiments showed that sleep in rats enhances consolidation of hippocampus dependent episodic-like memory, i.e. the ability to remember an event bound into specific spatio-temporal context. Here we tested the hypothesis that this enhancing effect of sleep is linked to the occurrence of slow oscillatory and spindle activity during slow wave sleep (SWS). Rats were tested on an episodic-like memory task and on three additional tasks covering separately the where (object place recognition), when (temporal memory), and what (novel object recognition) components of episodic memory. In each task, the sample phase (encoding) was followed by an 80-min retention interval that covered either a period of regular morning sleep or sleep deprivation. Memory during retrieval was tested using preferential exploration of novelty vs. familiarity. Consistent with previous findings, the rats which had slept during the retention interval showed significantly stronger episodic-like memory and spatial memory, and a trend of improved temporal memory (although not significant). Object recognition memory was similarly retained across sleep and sleep deprivation retention intervals. Recall of episodic-like memory was associated with increased slow oscillatory activity (0.85-2.0Hz) during SWS in the retention interval. Spatial memory was associated with increased proportions of SWS. Against our hypothesis, a relationship between spindle activity and episodic-like memory performance was not detected, but spindle activity was associated with object recognition memory. The results provide support for the role of SWS and slow oscillatory activity in consolidating hippocampus-dependent memory, the role of spindles in this process needs to be further examined.
我们之前的实验表明,大鼠睡眠可增强海马体依赖的类情景记忆巩固,即记住与特定时空背景相关事件的能力。在此,我们检验了如下假设:睡眠的这种增强作用与慢波睡眠(SWS)期间慢振荡和纺锤波活动的发生有关。对大鼠进行类情景记忆任务测试以及另外三项分别涵盖情景记忆的地点(物体位置识别)、时间(时间记忆)和内容(新物体识别)成分的任务测试。在每项任务中,样本阶段(编码)之后是80分钟的保持间隔,该间隔涵盖正常的早晨睡眠期或睡眠剥夺期。使用对新奇与熟悉的优先探索来测试检索期间的记忆。与先前的研究结果一致,在保持间隔期睡眠的大鼠表现出显著更强的类情景记忆和空间记忆,以及时间记忆改善的趋势(尽管不显著)。物体识别记忆在睡眠和睡眠剥夺保持间隔期的表现类似。类情景记忆的回忆与保持间隔期SWS期间慢振荡活动(0.85 - 2.0Hz)增加有关。空间记忆与SWS比例增加有关。与我们的假设相反,未检测到纺锤波活动与类情景记忆表现之间的关系,但纺锤波活动与物体识别记忆有关。这些结果为SWS和慢振荡活动在巩固海马体依赖记忆中的作用提供了支持,纺锤波在这一过程中的作用有待进一步研究。