Mortazavi Nasrin, Talwar Puneet, Koshmanova Ekaterina, Sharifpour Roya, Beckers Elise, Berger Alexandre, Campbell Islay, Paparella Ilenia, Balda Fermin, Dardour Hamzaoui Ismael, Berthomier Christian, Bastin Christine, Phillips Christophe, Maquet Pierre, Collette Fabienne, Zubkov Mikhail, Lamalle Laurent, Vandewalle Gilles
GIGA-Institute, CRC-Human Imaging, University of Liège, Bâtiment B30, 8 Allée du Six Août, Sart Tilman, 4000, Liège, Belgium.
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Mental Health and Neuroscience Research Institute, Alzheimer Centre Limburg, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
J Biomed Sci. 2025 Mar 11;32(1):35. doi: 10.1186/s12929-025-01127-9.
Animal studies established that the locus coeruleus (LC) plays important roles in sleep and wakefulness regulation. Whether it contributes to sleep variability in humans is not yet established. Here, we investigated if the in vivo activity of the LC is related to the variability in the quality of Rapid Eye Movement (REM) sleep.
We assessed the LC activity of 34 healthy younger (~ 22y) and 18 older (~ 61y) individuals engaged in bottom-up and top-down cognitive tasks using 7-Tesla functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). We further recorded their sleep electroencephalogram (EEG) to evaluate associations between LC fMRI measures and REM sleep EEG metrics.
Theta oscillation energy during REM sleep was positively associated with LC response in the top-down task. In contrast, REM sleep theta energy was negatively associated with LC activity in older individuals during the bottom-up task. Importantly, sigma oscillations power immediately preceding a REM sleep episode was positively associated with LC activity in the top-down task.
LC activity during wakefulness was related to REM sleep intensity and to a transient EEG change preceding REM sleep, a feature causally related to LC activity in animal studies. The associations depend on the cognitive task, suggesting that a balanced level of LC tonic activity during wakefulness is required for optimal expression of REM sleep. The findings may have implications for the high prevalence of sleep complaints reported in aging and for disorders such as insomnia, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's disease, for which the LC may play pivotal roles through sleep.
动物研究表明,蓝斑(LC)在睡眠和觉醒调节中起重要作用。它是否影响人类睡眠的变异性尚不清楚。在此,我们研究了蓝斑的体内活动是否与快速眼动(REM)睡眠质量的变异性有关。
我们使用7特斯拉功能磁共振成像(fMRI)评估了34名健康年轻人(约22岁)和18名老年人(约61岁)在自下而上和自上而下认知任务中的蓝斑活动。我们还记录了他们的睡眠脑电图(EEG),以评估蓝斑fMRI测量值与REM睡眠EEG指标之间的关联。
REM睡眠期间的θ振荡能量与自上而下任务中的蓝斑反应呈正相关。相比之下,在自下而上任务中,老年人REM睡眠的θ能量与蓝斑活动呈负相关。重要的是,REM睡眠发作前立即出现的σ振荡功率与自上而下任务中的蓝斑活动呈正相关。
清醒时的蓝斑活动与REM睡眠强度以及REM睡眠前的短暂脑电图变化有关,这一特征在动物研究中与蓝斑活动存在因果关系。这些关联取决于认知任务,表明清醒时蓝斑紧张性活动的平衡水平是REM睡眠最佳表现所必需的。这些发现可能对衰老过程中报告的高睡眠投诉率以及失眠、阿尔茨海默病和帕金森病等疾病具有启示意义,在这些疾病中,蓝斑可能通过睡眠发挥关键作用。