Fourment A, Hirsch J C, Marc M E, Guidet C
Neuroscience. 1984 Jun;12(2):453-64. doi: 10.1016/0306-4522(84)90065-4.
The experiments were designed to explore the role of retinal inputs compared with that of the behavioral state in the modulation of the output of thalamic lateral geniculate neurons during sleep and wakefulness in cats with intact visual pathways. We made the following assumptions: the retinal dark discharge, while showing spontaneous pauses in activity, does not vary with the behavioral state; the optic tract inputs postsynaptically elicit subthreshold activities called S-potentials which in turn generate spikes, the degree of transformation being dependent on the level of alertness. On the basis of these assumptions, it could be expected that changes in retinal input frequency would modify the rate of the S-potentials. Therefore the effect of spontaneous decreases in frequency of S-potentials on the spike rate and pattern was examined in juxta- and intracellular recordings from chronically implanted cats during natural sleep and wakefulness. During quiet wakefulness and light slow-wave sleep, lateral geniculate relay neurons normally displayed numerous S-potentials associated with a moderate firing rate. Many neurons occasionally showed transient reductions in frequency of the S-potentials and an oversimplification of the discharges which combined a decreased rate with a prevalent rhythmical burst pattern. Antidromic responsiveness remained unchanged. The oscillatory periods recurred two to six times without any alteration in the control state level. They were not observed throughout wakefulness and paradoxical sleep, during which neuronal activity combined a high spike rate with a low S-potential rate. The modifications were confirmed by computation of the mean rates and of the inter-event intervals. The transfer ratio (spikes/S-potentials + spikes) significantly increased both during the oscillatory periods poor in S-potentials of quiet wakefulness and during active wakefulness. But the correlation between the transfer ratio and the spike frequency, which was high throughout the control behavioral states, faded during the periods poor in S-potentials. Thus the transient falls in the frequency of S-potentials which occurred spontaneously during quiet wakefulness caused burst discharges in lateral geniculate relay neurons, which resembled a sleep deepening, but also paralleled the effect of experimental deafferentation. The data indicate that the iterative spikes grouped in well spaced bursts which persisted during decreases in subthreshold postsynaptic activities result in an enhanced signal-to-noise ratio.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
这些实验旨在探究在视觉通路完整的猫的睡眠和清醒过程中,视网膜输入与行为状态相比在丘脑外侧膝状体神经元输出调制中的作用。我们做出了以下假设:视网膜暗放电虽然会出现自发的活动暂停,但不会随行为状态而变化;视束输入在突触后引发称为S电位的阈下活动,进而产生动作电位,转换程度取决于警觉水平。基于这些假设,可以预期视网膜输入频率的变化会改变S电位的频率。因此,在自然睡眠和清醒期间,对慢性植入猫的旁细胞和细胞内记录进行了检查,以研究S电位频率的自发降低对动作电位频率和模式的影响。在安静清醒和浅慢波睡眠期间,外侧膝状体中继神经元通常会显示出许多与中等放电频率相关的S电位。许多神经元偶尔会出现S电位频率的短暂降低以及放电的过度简化,即放电频率降低并伴有普遍的节律性爆发模式。逆向反应性保持不变。振荡周期重复两到六次,控制状态水平没有任何改变。在整个清醒和异相睡眠期间未观察到它们,在此期间神经元活动将高动作电位频率与低S电位频率结合在一起。通过计算平均频率和事件间隔来证实这些变化。在安静清醒时S电位较少的振荡期和活跃清醒期间,传递比率(动作电位/S电位+动作电位)均显著增加。但是,在整个对照行为状态下较高的传递比率与动作电位频率之间的相关性,在S电位较少的时期减弱。因此,在安静清醒期间自发出现的S电位频率的短暂下降会导致外侧膝状体中继神经元出现爆发性放电,这类似于睡眠加深,但也与实验性去传入神经的效果相似。数据表明,在阈下突触后活动减少期间持续存在的、以间隔良好的爆发形式分组的迭代动作电位会导致信噪比提高。(摘要截短至400字)