Kavanau J L
University of California, Department of Biology, Los Angeles 90095-1606, U.S.A.
Neuroscience. 1997 Jul;79(1):7-44. doi: 10.1016/s0306-4522(96)00610-0.
The origin of both sleep and memory appears to be closely associated with the evolution of mechanisms of enhancement and maintenance of synaptic efficacy. The development of activity-dependent synaptic plasticity apparently was the first evolutionary adaptation of nervous systems beyond a capacity to respond to environmental stimuli by mere reflexive actions. After the origin of activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, whereby single activations of synapses led to short-term efficacy enhancement, lengthy maintenance of enhancements probably was achieved by repetitive activations ("dynamic stabilization"). One source of selective pressure for the evolutionary origin of neurons and neural circuits with oscillatory firing capacities may have been a need for repetitive spontaneous activations to maintain synaptic efficacy in circuits that were in infrequent use. This process is referred to as "non-utilitarian" dynamic stabilization. Dynamic stabilization of synapses in "simple" invertebrates occurs primarily through frequent use. In complex, locomoting forms, it probably occurs through both frequent use and non-utilitarian activations during restful waking. With the evolution of increasing repertories and complexities of behavioral and sensory capabilities--with vision usually being the vastly pre-eminent sense brain complexity increased markedly. Accompanying the greater complexity, needs for storage and maintenance of hereditary and experiential information (memories) increased greatly. It is suggested that these increases led to conflicts between sensory input processing during restful waking and concomitant non-utilitarian dynamic stabilization of infrequently used memory circuits. The selective pressure for the origin of primitive sleep may have been a resulting need to achieve greater depression of central processing of sensory inputs largely complex visual information than occurs during restful waking. The electrical activities of the brain during sleep (aside from those that subserve autonomic activities) may function largely to maintain sleep and to dynamically stabilize infrequently used circuitry encoding memories. Sleep may not have been the only evolutionary adaptation to conflicts between dynamic stabilization and sensory input processing. In some ectothermic vertebrates, sleep may have been postponed or rendered unnecessary by a more readily effected means of resolution of the conflicts, namely, extensive retinal processing of visual information during restful waking. By this means, processing of visual information in central regions of the brain may have been maintained at a sufficiently low level to allow adequate concomitant dynamic stabilization. As endothermy evolved, the skeletal muscle hypotonia of primitive sleep may have become insufficient to prevent sleep-disrupting skeletal muscle contractions during non-utilitarian dynamic stabilization of motor circuitry at the accompanying higher body temperatures and metabolic rates. Selection against such disruption during dynamic stabilization of motor circuitry may have led to the inhibition of skeletal muscle tone during a portion of primitive sleep, the portion designated as rapid-eye-movement sleep. Many marine mammals that are active almost continuously engage only in unihemispheric non-rapid-eye-movement sleep. They apparently do not require rapid-eye-movement sleep and accompanying non-utilitarian dynamic stabilization of motor circuitry, because this circuitry is in virtually continuous use. Studies of hibernation by arctic ground squirrels suggest that each hour of sleep may stabilize brain synapses for as long as 4 h. Phasic irregularities in heart and respiratory rates during rapid-eye-movement sleep may be a consequence of superposition of dynamic stabilization of motor circuitry on the rhythmic autonomic control mechanisms. Some information encoded in circuitry being dynamically stabilized during sleep achieves unconscious awareness in authentic and var
睡眠和记忆的起源似乎都与突触效能增强和维持机制的进化密切相关。依赖活动的突触可塑性的发展显然是神经系统在仅通过反射动作对环境刺激做出反应的能力之外的首次进化适应。在依赖活动的突触可塑性起源之后,即突触的单次激活导致短期效能增强,效能的长期维持可能是通过重复激活(“动态稳定”)实现的。具有振荡放电能力的神经元和神经回路进化起源的一个选择压力源可能是需要重复自发激活,以维持不常使用的回路中的突触效能。这个过程被称为“非功利性”动态稳定。“简单”无脊椎动物中突触的动态稳定主要通过频繁使用来实现。在复杂的、能运动的生物中,它可能通过频繁使用以及在安静清醒时的非功利性激活来实现。随着行为和感觉能力的储备和复杂性不断增加——视觉通常是极其突出的感觉——大脑复杂性显著增加。伴随着更大的复杂性,对遗传和经验信息(记忆)的存储和维持需求大幅增加。有人认为,这些增加导致了在安静清醒时感觉输入处理与不常使用的记忆回路同时进行的非功利性动态稳定之间的冲突。原始睡眠起源的选择压力可能是由此产生的一种需求,即要比在安静清醒时更大程度地抑制主要是复杂视觉信息的感觉输入的中枢处理。睡眠期间大脑的电活动(除了那些服务于自主活动的电活动)可能主要起到维持睡眠以及动态稳定编码记忆的不常使用的神经回路的作用。睡眠可能不是对动态稳定和感觉输入处理之间冲突的唯一进化适应。在一些变温脊椎动物中,睡眠可能通过一种更容易实现的冲突解决方式被推迟或变得不必要,即通过在安静清醒时对视觉信息进行广泛的视网膜处理。通过这种方式,大脑中枢区域的视觉信息处理可能被维持在足够低的水平,以允许进行充分的伴随动态稳定。随着恒温动物的进化,原始睡眠时骨骼肌的张力减退在伴随的较高体温和代谢率下,可能不足以防止在运动神经回路的非功利性动态稳定期间出现干扰睡眠的骨骼肌收缩。在运动神经回路动态稳定期间对这种干扰的选择淘汰可能导致在原始睡眠的一部分(即快速眼动睡眠)期间骨骼肌张力受到抑制。许多几乎持续活动的海洋哺乳动物只进行单半球非快速眼动睡眠。它们显然不需要快速眼动睡眠以及伴随的运动神经回路非功利性动态稳定,因为这个神经回路几乎一直在使用。对北极地松鼠冬眠的研究表明,每一小时的睡眠可能使大脑突触稳定长达4小时。快速眼动睡眠期间心脏和呼吸频率的阶段性不规则可能是运动神经回路动态稳定叠加在有节律的自主控制机制上的结果。在睡眠期间动态稳定的神经回路中编码的一些信息在真实和多样的情况下会达到无意识的觉知。