Hamel Anaïs, Champetier Pierre, Rehel Stéphane, André Claire, Landeau Brigitte, Mézenge Florence, Haudry Sacha, Roquet Daniel, Vivien Denis, de La Sayette Vincent, Chételat Gaël, Rauchs Géraldine, Mary Alison
Normandie Univ, UNICAEN, INSERM, U1237, PhIND "Physiopathology and Imaging of Neurological Disorders", NeuroPresage team, GIP Cyceron, 14000 Caen, France.
UR2NF - Neuropsychology and Functional Neuroimaging Research Unit (UR2NF), Center for Research in Cognition and Neurosciences (CRCN), ULB Neurosciences Institute (UNI), Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium.
Sleep. 2025 Apr 22. doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsaf105.
Episodic memory consolidation relies on the functional specialization of brain networks and sleep quality, both of which are affected by aging. Functional connectivity during wakefulness is crucial to support the integration of newly acquired information into memory networks. Additionally, the temporal dynamics of sleep spindles facilitates overnight memory consolidation by promoting hippocampal replay and integration of memories within neocortical structures. This study aimed at exploring how resting-state functional connectivity during wakefulness contributes to sleep-dependent memory consolidation in aging, and whether spindles clustered in trains modulates this relationship. Forty-two healthy older adults (68.82 ± 3.03 years), enrolled in the Age-Well clinical trial, were included. Sleep-dependent memory consolidation was assessed using a visuo-spatial memory task performed before and after a polysomnography night. Resting-state functional connectivity data were analyzed using graph theory applied to the whole brain, specific brain networks and the hippocampus. Lower limbic network integration and higher centrality of the anterior hippocampus were associated with better memory consolidation. Spindle trains modulated these effects, such that older participants with longer spindle trains exhibited a stronger negative association between limbic network integration and memory consolidation. These results indicate that lower functional specialization at rest is associated with weaker memory consolidation during sleep. This aligns with the dedifferentiation hypothesis, which posits that aging is associated with reduced brain specificity, leading to less efficient cognitive functioning. These findings reveal a novel mechanism linking daytime brain network organization and sleep-dependent memory consolidation, and suggest that targeting spindle dynamics could help preserve cognitive functioning in aging.
情景记忆巩固依赖于大脑网络的功能特化和睡眠质量,而这两者都会受到衰老的影响。清醒时的功能连接对于支持将新获取的信息整合到记忆网络中至关重要。此外,睡眠纺锤波的时间动态通过促进海马体重播和新皮质结构内记忆的整合来促进夜间记忆巩固。本研究旨在探讨清醒时的静息态功能连接如何促进衰老过程中依赖睡眠的记忆巩固,以及成串的纺锤波是否会调节这种关系。纳入了42名参与“健康老龄化”临床试验的健康老年人(68.82±3.03岁)。使用多导睡眠图监测当晚前后进行的视觉空间记忆任务来评估依赖睡眠的记忆巩固。使用应用于全脑、特定脑网络和海马体的图论分析静息态功能连接数据。边缘下网络整合和前海马体较高的中心性与更好的记忆巩固相关。纺锤波串调节了这些效应,使得纺锤波串较长的老年参与者在边缘网络整合与记忆巩固之间表现出更强的负相关。这些结果表明,静息时较低的功能特化与睡眠期间较弱的记忆巩固相关。这与去分化假说一致,该假说认为衰老与大脑特异性降低有关,导致认知功能效率降低。这些发现揭示了一种将白天大脑网络组织与依赖睡眠的记忆巩固联系起来的新机制,并表明针对纺锤波动态可能有助于维持衰老过程中的认知功能。