Lee Heonsoo, Wang Shiyong, Hudetz Anthony G
Center for Consciousness Science, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105.
Center for Consciousness Science, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
J Neurosci. 2020 Dec 2;40(49):9440-9454. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0601-20.2020. Epub 2020 Oct 29.
Understanding the effects of anesthesia on cortical neuronal spiking and information transfer could help illuminate the neuronal basis of the conscious state. Recent investigations suggest that the brain state identified by local field potential spectrum is not stationary but changes spontaneously at a fixed level of anesthetic concentration. How cortical unit activity changes with dynamically transitioning brain states under anesthesia is unclear. Extracellular unit activity was measured with 64-channel silicon microelectrode arrays in cortical layers 5/6 of the primary visual cortex of chronically instrumented, freely moving male rats ( = 7) during stepwise reduction of the anesthetic desflurane (6%, 4%, 2%, and 0%). Unsupervised machine learning applied to multiunit spike patterns revealed five distinct brain states. A novel desynchronized brain state with increased spike rate variability, sample entropy, and EMG activity occurred in 6% desflurane with 40.0% frequency. The other four brain states reflected graded levels of anesthesia. As anesthesia deepened the spike rate of neurons decreased regardless of their spike rate profile at baseline conscious state. Actively firing neurons with wide-spiking pattern showed increased bursting activity along with increased spike timing variability, unit-to-population correlation, and unit-to-unit transfer entropy, despite the overall decrease in transfer entropy. The narrow-spiking neurons showed similar changes but to a lesser degree. These results suggest that (1) anesthetic effect on spike rate is distinct from sleep, (2) synchronously fragmented spiking pattern is a signature of anesthetic-induced unconsciousness, and (3) the paradoxical, desynchronized brain state in deep anesthesia contends the generally presumed monotonic, dose-dependent anesthetic effect on the brain. Recent studies suggest that spontaneous changes in brain state occur under anesthesia. However, the spiking behavior of cortical neurons associated with such state changes has not been investigated. We found that local brain states defined by multiunit activity had a nonunitary relationship with the current anesthetic level. A paradoxical brain state displaying asynchronous firing pattern and high EMG activity was found unexpectedly in deep anesthesia. In contrast, the synchronous fragmentation of neuronal spiking appeared to be a robust signature of the state of anesthesia. The findings challenge the assumption of monotonic, anesthetic dose-dependent behavior of cortical neuron populations. They enhance the interpretation of neuroscientific data obtained under anesthesia and the understanding of the neuronal basis of anesthetic-induced state of unconsciousness.
了解麻醉对皮质神经元放电和信息传递的影响有助于阐明意识状态的神经元基础。最近的研究表明,由局部场电位频谱确定的脑状态并非静止不变,而是在固定麻醉浓度水平下自发变化。目前尚不清楚在麻醉状态下,随着脑状态动态转变,皮质神经元活动会如何变化。在逐步降低麻醉剂地氟醚(6%、4%、2%和0%)浓度的过程中,使用64通道硅微电极阵列,在长期植入仪器、自由活动的雄性大鼠(n = 7)初级视觉皮质第5/6层中测量细胞外单位活动。应用于多单位放电模式的无监督机器学习揭示了五种不同的脑状态。在6%地氟醚麻醉状态下,出现了一种新的去同步化脑状态,其放电率变异性、样本熵和肌电图活动增加,出现频率为40.0%。其他四种脑状态反映了不同程度的麻醉水平。随着麻醉加深,无论神经元在基线清醒状态下的放电率模式如何,其放电率都会降低。具有宽峰放电模式的主动放电神经元,尽管总体转移熵降低,但爆发活动增加,同时放电时间变异性、单位与群体相关性以及单位与单位之间的转移熵增加。窄峰放电神经元表现出类似变化,但程度较小。这些结果表明:(1)麻醉对放电率的影响与睡眠不同;(2)同步碎片化放电模式是麻醉诱导无意识状态的特征;(3)深度麻醉中出现的矛盾的、去同步化脑状态与通常认为的麻醉对大脑单调的、剂量依赖性效应相矛盾。最近的研究表明,麻醉状态下脑状态会自发变化。然而,与这种状态变化相关的皮质神经元放电行为尚未得到研究。我们发现,由多单位活动定义的局部脑状态与当前麻醉水平之间并非单一关系。在深度麻醉中意外发现了一种表现为异步放电模式和高肌电图活动的矛盾脑状态。相反,神经元放电的同步碎片化似乎是麻醉状态的一个可靠特征。这些发现挑战了皮质神经元群体麻醉剂量依赖性单调行为的假设。它们增强了对麻醉状态下获得的神经科学数据的解读,以及对麻醉诱导无意识状态神经元基础的理解。