Department of Neurobiology, Institute of Medical Research Israel-Canada, Hadassah Medical School, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 9112001 Jerusalem, Israel;
Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 9190401 Jerusalem, Israel.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 May 1;115(18):E4274-E4283. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1720795115. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Slow oscillations of neuronal activity alternating between firing and silence are a hallmark of slow-wave sleep (SWS). These oscillations reflect the default activity present in all mammalian species, and are ubiquitous to anesthesia, brain slice preparations, and neuronal cultures. In all these cases, neuronal firing is highly synchronous within local circuits, suggesting that oscillation-synchronization coupling may be a governing principle of sleep physiology regardless of anatomical connectivity. To investigate whether this principle applies to overall brain organization, we recorded the activity of individual neurons from basal ganglia (BG) structures and the thalamocortical (TC) network over 70 full nights of natural sleep in two vervet monkeys. During SWS, BG neurons manifested slow oscillations (∼0.5 Hz) in firing rate that were as prominent as in the TC network. However, in sharp contrast to any neural substrate explored thus far, the slow oscillations in all BG structures were completely desynchronized between individual neurons. Furthermore, whereas in the TC network single-cell spiking was locked to slow oscillations in the local field potential (LFP), the BG LFP exhibited only weak slow oscillatory activity and failed to entrain nearby cells. We thus show that synchrony is not inherent to slow oscillations, and propose that the BG desynchronization of slow oscillations could stem from its unique anatomy and functional connectivity. Finally, we posit that BG slow-oscillation desynchronization may further the reemergence of slow-oscillation traveling waves from multiple independent origins in the frontal cortex, thus significantly contributing to normal SWS.
神经元活动的缓慢振荡在放电和静息之间交替,是慢波睡眠(SWS)的标志。这些振荡反映了所有哺乳动物物种中存在的默认活动,并且在麻醉、脑切片制备和神经元培养中普遍存在。在所有这些情况下,局部回路中的神经元放电高度同步,这表明振荡同步耦合可能是睡眠生理学的一个基本原理,而与解剖连接无关。为了研究这一原理是否适用于大脑的整体组织,我们在两只长尾猕猴的 70 个完整的自然睡眠夜晚中,从基底神经节(BG)结构和丘脑皮质(TC)网络中记录了单个神经元的活动。在 SWS 期间,BG 神经元的放电率表现出缓慢的振荡(约 0.5 Hz),与 TC 网络中的振荡一样明显。然而,与迄今为止探索的任何神经基质形成鲜明对比的是,所有 BG 结构中的缓慢振荡在单个神经元之间完全失步。此外,虽然在 TC 网络中单细胞的爆发与局部场电位(LFP)中的慢波同步,但 BG 的 LFP 仅表现出微弱的慢振荡活动,并且无法使附近的细胞同步。因此,我们表明同步不是慢波振荡固有的,并且提出 BG 慢波振荡的去同步可能源于其独特的解剖结构和功能连接。最后,我们假设 BG 慢波振荡去同步可能会进一步促进来自额叶皮质多个独立起源的慢波传播波的重新出现,从而对正常的 SWS 做出重大贡献。