VA Boston Healthcare System and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, West Roxbury, MA 02132, USA.
Department of Biological & Environmental Sciences, Western Connecticut State University, Danbury, CT 06810, USA.
Curr Biol. 2020 Jun 22;30(12):2379-2385.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.04.029. Epub 2020 May 14.
The ability to rapidly arouse from sleep is important for survival. However, increased arousals in patients with sleep apnea and other disorders prevent restful sleep and contribute to cognitive, metabolic, and physiologic dysfunction [1, 2]. Little is currently known about which neural systems mediate these brief arousals, hindering the development of treatments that restore normal sleep. The basal forebrain (BF) receives inputs from many nuclei of the ascending arousal system, including the brainstem parabrachial neurons, which promote arousal in response to elevated blood carbon dioxide levels, as seen in sleep apnea [3]. Optical inhibition of the terminals of parabrachial neurons in the BF impairs cortical arousals to hypercarbia [4], but which BF cell types mediate cortical arousals in response to hypercarbia or other sensory stimuli is unknown. Here, we tested the role of BF parvalbumin (PV) neurons in arousal using optogenetic techniques in mice. Optical stimulation of BF-PV neurons produced rapid transitions to wakefulness from non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep but did not affect REM-wakefulness transitions. Unlike previous studies of BF glutamatergic and cholinergic neurons, arousals induced by stimulation of BF-PV neurons were brief and only slightly increased total wake time, reminiscent of clinical findings in sleep apnea [5, 6]. Bilateral optical inhibition of BF-PV neurons increased the latency to arousal produced by exposure to hypercarbia or auditory stimuli. Thus, BF-PV neurons are an important component of the brain circuitry that generates brief arousals from sleep in response to stimuli, which may indicate physiological dysfunction or danger to the organism.
快速从睡眠中觉醒的能力对生存至关重要。然而,睡眠呼吸暂停和其他障碍患者的觉醒增加会阻止其获得宁静的睡眠,并导致认知、代谢和生理功能障碍[1,2]。目前人们对介导这些短暂觉醒的神经环路知之甚少,这阻碍了恢复正常睡眠的治疗方法的发展。基底前脑(BF)接收来自许多上行觉醒系统核团的输入,包括脑桥臂旁核神经元,后者响应升高的血二氧化碳水平促进觉醒,如睡眠呼吸暂停中所见[3]。用光抑制 BF 中的臂旁核神经元末梢会损害皮质对高碳酸血症的觉醒[4],但尚不清楚 BF 中的哪种细胞类型介导皮质对高碳酸血症或其他感觉刺激的觉醒。在这里,我们使用光遗传学技术在小鼠中测试了 BF 中的 Parvalbumin (PV) 神经元在觉醒中的作用。BF-PV 神经元的光刺激会迅速将非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠转变为觉醒状态,但不会影响 REM-觉醒的转变。与之前对 BF 谷氨酸能和胆碱能神经元的研究不同,BF-PV 神经元刺激引起的觉醒时间短暂,仅略微增加总觉醒时间,这与睡眠呼吸暂停中的临床发现相似[5,6]。BF-PV 神经元的双侧光抑制增加了暴露于高碳酸血症或听觉刺激时产生觉醒的潜伏期。因此,BF-PV 神经元是大脑回路的重要组成部分,该回路会在受到刺激时产生短暂的睡眠觉醒,这可能表明机体的生理功能障碍或处于危险之中。