Oksenberg A, Shaffery J P, Marks G A, Speciale S G, Mihailoff G, Roffwarg H P
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson 39216-4505, USA.
Brain Res Dev Brain Res. 1996 Nov 22;97(1):51-61. doi: 10.1016/s0165-3806(96)00131-9.
The abundance of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep in the neonatal mammal and its subsequent decline in the course of development, as well as the dramatic and widespread enhancement of CNS activity during REM sleep, led us to propose that this state plays a functional role in the normative physiological and structural maturation of the brain [54]. When, after 1 week of monocular deprivation (MD), a second week of MD was coupled with behavioral deprivation of REM sleep, the structural alteration in the visual system provoked by MD alone (interlaminar relay cell-size disparity in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) was amplified. With the addition of REM deprivation during MD, the LGN cells connected to the surgically patched eye, which are smaller than normal after MD, became even smaller, whereas the LGN cells receiving input from the seeing eye, which display compensatory hypertrophy after MD, grew even larger. We believe that the interlaminar disparity effect widened because during REM deprivation, the already vision-compromised LGN cells associated with the patched eye also lose the ascending brainstem activation reaching them during the REM state. Loss of the two main sources of 'afference' by these LGN cells permits their seeing-eye LGN counterparts to gain even greater advantage in the competition for synaptic connections in cortex, which is reflected in the relative soma sizes of the LGN relay cells. It is likely that the relatively abundant REM state in early maturation provides symmetric stimulation to all LGN relay cells, irrespective of eye of innervation. The symmetric activation propagated from brainstem to LGN acts to 'buffer' abnormal, asymmetric visual input and, thereby diminishes the extreme, asymmetric structural alteration that results from MD in the absence of REM sleep. We conclude that REM sleep-generated CNS discharge in development has the effect of 'protecting' the CNS against excessive plasticity changes. This is consistent with the possibility that REM sleep plays a role in the genetically programmed processes that direct normative brain development.
新生哺乳动物快速眼动(REM)睡眠丰富,随后在发育过程中减少,以及REM睡眠期间中枢神经系统(CNS)活动显著且广泛增强,这使我们提出,这种状态在大脑正常的生理和结构成熟中发挥功能性作用[54]。在单眼剥夺(MD)1周后,如果第二周的MD与REM睡眠行为剥夺相结合,单独MD引起的视觉系统结构改变(外侧膝状体核(LGN)层间中继细胞大小差异)会被放大。在MD期间加上REM剥夺,与手术缝合眼相连的LGN细胞,在MD后比正常小,变得更小,而接受来自未缝合眼输入的LGN细胞,在MD后显示出代偿性肥大,变得更大。我们认为层间差异效应扩大是因为在REM剥夺期间,与缝合眼相关的已经视力受损的LGN细胞也失去了REM状态下到达它们的脑干上行激活。这些LGN细胞失去两个主要的“传入”来源,使得它们与未缝合眼相连的LGN对应细胞在争夺皮层突触连接的竞争中获得更大优势,这反映在LGN中继细胞的相对胞体大小上。早期成熟阶段相对丰富的REM状态可能为所有LGN中继细胞提供对称刺激,而不论其神经支配的眼睛。从脑干传播到LGN的对称激活起到“缓冲”异常、不对称视觉输入的作用,从而减少在没有REM睡眠时MD导致的极端、不对称结构改变。我们得出结论,发育过程中REM睡眠产生的CNS放电具有“保护”CNS免受过度可塑性变化影响的作用。这与REM睡眠在指导大脑正常发育的基因编程过程中发挥作用的可能性是一致的。