Bartsch Ullrich, Simpkin Andrew J, Demanuele Charmaine, Wamsley Erin, Marston Hugh M, Jones Matthew W
Translational & Integrative Neuroscience, Lilly Research Centre, Windlesham, Surrey, GU20 6PH, UK.
School of Physiology, Pharmacology & Neuroscience, University of Bristol, Biomedical Sciences Building, University Walk, Bristol, BS8 1TD, UK.
NPJ Schizophr. 2019 Nov 4;5(1):18. doi: 10.1038/s41537-019-0086-8.
The slow waves (SW) of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep reflect neocortical components of network activity during sleep-dependent information processing; their disruption may therefore impair memory consolidation. Here, we quantify sleep-dependent consolidation of motor sequence memory, alongside sleep EEG-derived SW properties and synchronisation, and SW-spindle coupling in 21 patients suffering from schizophrenia and 19 healthy volunteers. Impaired memory consolidation in patients culminated in an overnight improvement in motor sequence task performance of only 1.6%, compared with 15% in controls. During sleep after learning, SW amplitudes and densities were comparable in healthy controls and patients. However, healthy controls showed a significant 45% increase in frontal-to-occipital SW coherence during sleep after motor learning in comparison with a baseline night (baseline: 0.22 ± 0.05, learning: 0.32 ± 0.05); patient EEG failed to show this increase (baseline: 0.22 ± 0.04, learning: 0.19 ± 0.04). The experience-dependent nesting of spindles in SW was similarly disrupted in patients: frontal-to-occipital SW-spindle phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) significantly increased after learning in healthy controls (modulation index baseline: 0.17 ± 0.02, learning: 0.22 ± 0.02) but not in patients (baseline: 0.13 ± 0.02, learning: 0.14 ± 0.02). Partial least-squares regression modelling of coherence and PAC data from all electrode pairs confirmed distributed SW coherence and SW-spindle coordination as superior predictors of overnight memory consolidation in healthy controls but not in patients. Quantifying the full repertoire of NREM EEG oscillations and their long-range covariance therefore presents learning-dependent changes in distributed SW and spindle coordination as fingerprints of impaired cognition in schizophrenia.
非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠的慢波(SW)反映了睡眠依赖性信息处理过程中网络活动的新皮质成分;因此,它们的破坏可能会损害记忆巩固。在这里,我们对21名精神分裂症患者和19名健康志愿者的运动序列记忆的睡眠依赖性巩固、睡眠脑电图衍生的SW特性和同步性以及SW-纺锤波耦合进行了量化。患者的记忆巩固受损,运动序列任务表现的夜间改善仅为1.6%,而对照组为15%。在学习后的睡眠期间,健康对照组和患者的SW振幅和密度相当。然而,与基线夜相比,健康对照组在运动学习后的睡眠期间额枕SW相干性显著增加45%(基线:0.22±0.05,学习:0.32±0.05);患者脑电图未显示这种增加(基线:0.22±0.04,学习:0.19±0.04)。患者中纺锤波在SW中的经验依赖性嵌套同样受到破坏:健康对照组学习后额枕SW-纺锤波相位-振幅耦合(PAC)显著增加(调制指数基线:0.17±0.02,学习:0.22±0.02),而患者则没有(基线:0.13±0.02,学习:0.14±0.02)。对所有电极对的相干性和PAC数据进行偏最小二乘回归建模证实,分布式SW相干性和SW-纺锤波协调性是健康对照组夜间记忆巩固的更好预测指标,但在患者中并非如此。因此,量化NREM脑电图振荡的全部组成及其长程协方差呈现出分布式SW和纺锤波协调性的学习依赖性变化,作为精神分裂症认知受损的特征。