Department of Statistics, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Department of Psychiatry, Kinsmen Laboratory of Neurological Research, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2019 Oct 1;122(4):1794-1809. doi: 10.1152/jn.00456.2019. Epub 2019 Aug 21.
During slow-wave sleep and anesthesia, mammalian cortex exhibits a synchronized state during which neurons shift from a largely nonfiring to a firing state, known as an Up-state transition. Up-state transitions may constitute the default activity pattern of the entire cortex (Neske GT. 9: 88, 2016) and could be critical to understanding cortical function, yet the genesis of such transitions and their interaction with single neurons is not well understood. It was recently shown that neurons firing at rates >2 Hz fire spikes in a stereotyped order during Up-state transitions (Luczak A, McNaughton BL, Harris KD. 16: 745-755, 2015), yet it is still unknown if Up states are homogeneous and whether spiking order is present in neurons with rates <2 Hz (the majority). Using extracellular recordings from anesthetized cats and mice and from naturally sleeping rats, we show for the first time that Up-state transitions can be classified into several types based on the shape of the local field potential (LFP) during each transition. Individual LFP events could be localized in time to within 1-4 ms, more than an order of magnitude less than in previous studies. The majority of recorded neurons synchronized their firing to within ±5-15 ms relative to each Up-state transition. Simultaneous electrophysiology and wide-field imaging in mouse confirmed that LFP event clusters are cortex-wide phenomena. Our findings show that Up states are of different types and point to the potential importance of temporal order and millisecond-scale signaling by cortical neurons. During cortical Up-state transitions in sleep and anesthesia, neurons undergo brief periods of increased firing in an order similar to that occurring in awake states. We show that these transitions can be classified into distinct types based on the shape of the local field potential. Transition times can be defined to <5 ms. Most neurons synchronize their firing to within ±5-15 ms of the transitions and fire in a consistent order.
在慢波睡眠和麻醉期间,哺乳动物皮层表现出同步状态,在此期间神经元从主要不发射状态转变为发射状态,称为上状态转变。上状态转变可能构成整个皮层的默认活动模式(Neske GT. 9: 88, 2016),并且对于理解皮层功能可能至关重要,但这种转变的起源及其与单个神经元的相互作用尚不清楚。最近的研究表明,在快波转换期间,以 >2 Hz 频率发射的神经元以一种刻板的顺序发射尖峰(Luczak A、McNaughton BL、Harris KD. 16: 745-755, 2015),但目前尚不清楚上状态是否均匀,以及在<2 Hz(大多数)频率的神经元中是否存在尖峰顺序。我们使用麻醉猫和小鼠以及自然睡眠大鼠的细胞外记录,首次表明可以根据每个转换期间局部场电位(LFP)的形状将上状态转换分类为几种类型。单个 LFP 事件可以在时间上精确到 1-4 ms 以内,比以前的研究高一个数量级。记录到的大多数神经元将其发射与每个上状态转换同步到 5-15 ms 以内。在小鼠中同时进行电生理学和宽场成像证实,LFP 事件簇是皮层范围内的现象。我们的研究结果表明,上状态有不同的类型,并指出了时间顺序和皮层神经元的毫秒级信号传递的潜在重要性。在睡眠和麻醉期间皮层的上状态转换期间,神经元以类似于在清醒状态下发生的顺序经历短暂的发射增加期。我们表明可以根据局部场电位的形状将这些转换分类为不同的类型。转换时间可以定义为<5 ms。大多数神经元将其发射与转换同步到 5-15 ms 以内,并以一致的顺序发射。