Department of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093,
University California Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720.
J Neurosci. 2018 Nov 14;38(46):9989-10001. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0476-18.2018. Epub 2018 Sep 21.
Since their discovery, slow oscillations have been observed to group spindles during non-REM sleep. Previous studies assert that the slow-oscillation downstate (DS) is preceded by slow spindles (10-12 Hz) and followed by fast spindles (12-16 Hz). Here, using both direct transcortical recordings in patients with intractable epilepsy ( = 10, 8 female), as well as scalp EEG recordings from a healthy cohort ( = 3, 1 female), we find in multiple cortical areas that both slow and fast spindles follow the DS. Although discrete oscillations do precede DSs, they are theta bursts (TBs) centered at 5-8 Hz. TBs were more pronounced for DSs in NREM stage 2 (N2) sleep compared with N3. TB with similar properties occur in the thalamus, but unlike spindles they have no clear temporal relationship with cortical TB. These differences in corticothalamic dynamics, as well as differences between spindles and theta in coupling high-frequency content, are consistent with NREM theta having separate generative mechanisms from spindles. The final inhibitory cycle of the TB coincides with the DS peak, suggesting that in N2, TB may help trigger the DS. Since the transition to N1 is marked by the appearance of theta, and the transition to N2 by the appearance of DS and thus spindles, a role of TB in triggering DS could help explain the sequence of electrophysiological events characterizing sleep. Finally, the coordinated appearance of spindles and DSs are implicated in memory consolidation processes, and the current findings redefine their temporal coupling with theta during NREM sleep. Sleep is characterized by large slow waves which modulate brain activity. Prominent among these are downstates (DSs), periods of a few tenths of a second when most cells stop firing, and spindles, oscillations at ∼12 times a second lasting for ∼a second. In this study, we provide the first detailed description of another kind of sleep wave: theta bursts (TBs), a brief oscillation at ∼six cycles per second. We show, recording during natural sleep directly from the human cortex and thalamus, as well as on the scalp, that TBs precede, and spindles follow DSs. TBs may help trigger DSs in some circumstances, and could organize cortical and thalamic activity so that memories can be consolidated during sleep.
自发现以来,慢波振荡已被观察到在非快速眼动睡眠期间将纺锤波分组。先前的研究断言,慢波振荡下降状态(DS)之前是慢纺锤波(10-12Hz),之后是快纺锤波(12-16Hz)。在这里,我们使用来自难治性癫痫患者的直接皮质记录(=10,8 名女性)以及来自健康队列的头皮 EEG 记录(=3,1 名女性),在多个皮质区域中发现,慢波和快波都紧随 DS 之后。尽管离散振荡确实先于 DS,但它们是中心频率为 5-8Hz 的 theta 爆发(TBs)。与 N3 相比,N2 睡眠中的 DSs 中 TBs 更为明显。具有相似特性的 TBs 也出现在丘脑,但与纺锤波不同,它们与皮质 TB 之间没有明确的时间关系。皮质丘脑动力学的这些差异,以及纺锤波和 theta 在耦合高频内容方面的差异,与 NREM theta 具有与纺锤波不同的生成机制是一致的。TB 的最后一个抑制周期与 DS 峰值重合,表明在 N2 中,TB 可能有助于触发 DS。由于向 N1 的过渡以 theta 的出现为标志,而向 N2 的过渡以 DS 和纺锤波的出现为标志,因此 TB 在触发 DS 中的作用可以帮助解释睡眠中特征性的电生理事件序列。最后,纺锤波和 DS 的协调出现与记忆巩固过程有关,当前的发现重新定义了它们在 NREM 睡眠期间与 theta 的时间耦合。睡眠的特征是大的慢波,它们调节大脑活动。其中突出的是下降状态(DSs),即几十分之一秒的时间段,在此期间大多数细胞停止发射,以及纺锤波,每秒约 12 次的振荡持续约一秒。在这项研究中,我们首次详细描述了另一种睡眠波:theta 爆发(TBs),一种每秒约六次的短暂振荡。我们表明,通过直接从人类皮质和丘脑以及头皮记录,在自然睡眠期间,TBs 先于 DSs,而纺锤波紧随其后。TBs 在某些情况下可能有助于触发 DSs,并可以组织皮质和丘脑的活动,以便在睡眠期间巩固记忆。