Siegel J M, Manger P R, Nienhuis R, Fahringer H M, Pettigrew J D
Sepulveda VAMC, North Hills, CA 91343, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 1998 Jul 29;353(1372):1147-57. doi: 10.1098/rstb.1998.0272.
Early studies of the echidna led to the conclusion that this monotreme did not have rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Because the monotremes had diverged from the placental and marsupial lines very early in mammalian evolution, this finding was used to support the hypothesis that REM sleep evolved after the start of the mammalian line. The current paper summarizes our recent work on sleep in the echidna and platypus and leads to a very different interpretation. By using neuronal recording from mesopontine regions in the echidna, we found that despite the presence of a high-voltage cortical electroencephalogram (EEG), brainstem units fire in irregular bursts intermediate in intensity between the regular non-REM sleep pattern and the highly irregular REM sleep pattern seen in placentals. Thus the echidna displays brainstem activation during sleep with high-voltage cortical EEG. This work encouraged us to do the first study of sleep, to our knowledge, in the platypus. In the platypus we saw sleep with vigorous rapid eye, bill and head twitching, identical in behaviour to that which defines REM sleep in placental mammals. Recording of the EEG in the platypus during natural sleep and waking states revealed that it had moderate and high-voltage cortical EEGs during this REM sleep state. The platypus not only has REM sleep, but it had more of it than any other animal. The lack of EEG voltage reduction during REM sleep in the platypus, and during the REM sleep-like state of the echidna, has some similarity to the sleep seen in neonatal sleep in placentals. The very high amounts of REM sleep seen in the platypus also fit with the increased REM sleep duration seen in altricial mammals. Our findings suggest that REM sleep originated earlier in mammalian evolution than had previously been thought and is consistent with the hypothesis that REM sleep, or a precursor state with aspects of REM sleep, may have had its origin in reptilian species.
对针鼹的早期研究得出结论,这种单孔目动物没有快速眼动(REM)睡眠。由于单孔目动物在哺乳动物进化的早期就已从胎盘类和有袋类动物中分化出来,这一发现被用来支持快速眼动睡眠是在哺乳动物谱系开始之后才进化出来的假说。本文总结了我们最近对针鼹和鸭嘴兽睡眠的研究工作,并得出了截然不同的解释。通过记录针鼹中脑桥区域的神经元活动,我们发现,尽管存在高电压的皮层脑电图(EEG),但脑干神经元以不规则的爆发形式放电,其强度介于胎盘类动物典型的规则非快速眼动睡眠模式和高度不规则的快速眼动睡眠模式之间。因此,针鼹在睡眠期间表现出脑干激活,并伴有高电压皮层脑电图。这项工作促使我们开展了据我们所知对鸭嘴兽睡眠的首次研究。在鸭嘴兽身上,我们观察到睡眠时伴有剧烈的眼球快速运动、喙部和头部抽搐,其行为与胎盘类哺乳动物中定义快速眼动睡眠的行为完全相同。在鸭嘴兽自然睡眠和清醒状态下记录脑电图发现,在这种快速眼动睡眠状态下,其皮层脑电图为中度和高电压。鸭嘴兽不仅有快速眼动睡眠,而且其快速眼动睡眠的时间比其他任何动物都要长。鸭嘴兽在快速眼动睡眠期间以及针鼹类似快速眼动睡眠状态下缺乏脑电图电压降低的情况,与胎盘类动物新生儿睡眠中的情况有一些相似之处。鸭嘴兽中观察到的大量快速眼动睡眠也与早产哺乳动物中快速眼动睡眠时间增加的情况相符。我们的研究结果表明,快速眼动睡眠在哺乳动物进化过程中的起源比之前认为的要早,这与快速眼动睡眠或具有快速眼动睡眠某些特征的前身状态可能起源于爬行动物物种的假说相一致。