Fernandez Laura M J, Lecci Sandro, Cardis Romain, Vantomme Gil, Béard Elidie, Lüthi Anita
Department of Fundamental Neurosciences, University of Lausanne.
Department of Fundamental Neurosciences, University of Lausanne;
J Vis Exp. 2017 Aug 2(126):55863. doi: 10.3791/55863.
Three vigilance states dominate mammalian life: wakefulness, non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep, and REM sleep. As more neural correlates of behavior are identified in freely moving animals, this three-fold subdivision becomes too simplistic. During wakefulness, ensembles of global and local cortical activities, together with peripheral parameters such as pupillary diameter and sympathovagal balance, define various degrees of arousal. It remains unclear the extent to which sleep also forms a continuum of brain states-within which the degree of resilience to sensory stimuli and arousability, and perhaps other sleep functions, vary gradually-and how peripheral physiological states co-vary. Research advancing the methods to monitor multiple parameters during sleep, as well as attributing to constellations of these functional attributes, is central to refining our understanding of sleep as a multifunctional process during which many beneficial effects must be executed. Identifying novel parameters characterizing sleep states will open opportunities for novel diagnostic avenues in sleep disorders. We present a procedure to describe dynamic variations of mouse non-REM sleep states via the combined monitoring and analysis of electroencephalogram (EEG)/electrocorticogram (ECoG), electromyogram (EMG), and electrocardiogram (ECG) signals using standard polysomnographic recording techniques. Using this approach, we found that mouse non-REM sleep is organized into cycles of coordinated neural and cardiac oscillations that generate successive 25-s intervals of high and low fragility to external stimuli. Therefore, central and autonomic nervous systems are coordinated to form behaviorally distinct sleep states during consolidated non-REM sleep. We present surgical manipulations for polysomnographic (i.e., EEG/EMG combined with ECG) monitoring to track these cycles in the freely sleeping mouse, the analysis to quantify their dynamics, and the acoustic stimulation protocols to assess their role in the likelihood of waking up. Our approach has already been extended to human sleep and promises to unravel common organizing principles of non-REM sleep states in mammals.
清醒、非快速眼动(non-REM)睡眠和快速眼动(REM)睡眠。随着在自由活动动物中发现更多与行为相关的神经关联,这种三重分类变得过于简单。在清醒状态下,全局和局部皮质活动的集合,以及诸如瞳孔直径和交感迷走神经平衡等外周参数,定义了不同程度的觉醒。目前尚不清楚睡眠在多大程度上也形成了一个连续的脑状态——在这个连续体中,对感觉刺激的恢复能力和唤醒能力的程度,以及可能的其他睡眠功能,会逐渐变化——以及外周生理状态如何共同变化。推进在睡眠期间监测多个参数的方法,以及将这些功能属性归因于各种组合,对于完善我们对睡眠作为一个多功能过程的理解至关重要,在这个过程中必须执行许多有益的作用。识别表征睡眠状态的新参数将为睡眠障碍的新型诊断途径带来机会。我们提出了一种程序,通过使用标准多导睡眠图记录技术对脑电图(EEG)/皮质电图(ECoG)、肌电图(EMG)和心电图(ECG)信号进行联合监测和分析,来描述小鼠非快速眼动睡眠状态的动态变化。使用这种方法,我们发现小鼠非快速眼动睡眠被组织成协调的神经和心脏振荡周期,这些周期产生连续25秒的对外界刺激高脆弱性和低脆弱性的间隔。因此,中枢神经系统和自主神经系统在巩固的非快速眼动睡眠期间协同作用,形成行为上不同的睡眠状态。我们展示了用于多导睡眠图(即EEG/EMG与ECG相结合)监测的手术操作,以追踪自由睡眠小鼠中的这些周期,进行量化其动态的分析,以及评估它们在唤醒可能性中作用的声学刺激方案。我们的方法已经扩展到人类睡眠,并有望揭示哺乳动物非快速眼动睡眠状态的共同组织原则。