非快速眼动睡眠
睡眠纺锤
神经科学
K-络合物
蓝斑
睡眠(系统调用)
记忆巩固
唤醒
睡眠神经科学
心理学
快速眼动睡眠
慢波睡眠
眼球运动
睡眠阶段
脑电图
多导睡眠图
中枢神经系统
计算机科学
海马体
操作系统
作者
Celia Kjaerby,Mie Andersen,Natalie L. Hauglund,Verena Untiet,Camilla Dall,Björn Sigurðsson,Fengfei Ding,Jiesi Feng,Yulong Li,Pia Weikop,Hajime Hirase,Maiken Nedergaard
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41593-022-01102-9
摘要
Sleep has a complex micro-architecture, encompassing micro-arousals, sleep spindles and transitions between sleep stages. Fragmented sleep impairs memory consolidation, whereas spindle-rich and delta-rich non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep promote it. However, the relationship between micro-arousals and memory-promoting aspects of sleep remains unclear. In this study, we used fiber photometry in mice to examine how release of the arousal mediator norepinephrine (NE) shapes sleep micro-architecture. Here we show that micro-arousals are generated in a periodic pattern during NREM sleep, riding on the peak of locus-coeruleus-generated infraslow oscillations of extracellular NE, whereas descending phases of NE oscillations drive spindles. The amplitude of NE oscillations is crucial for shaping sleep micro-architecture related to memory performance: prolonged descent of NE promotes spindle-enriched intermediate state and REM sleep but also associates with awakenings, whereas shorter NE descents uphold NREM sleep and micro-arousals. Thus, the NE oscillatory amplitude may be a target for improving sleep in sleep disorders. Kjaerby and Andersen et al. show that norepinephrine (NE) plays profound roles in shaping sleep micro-architecture. NE slowly oscillates during sleep, with NE oscillatory amplitude being a major determinant of spindle-dependent memory consolidation and awakenings.
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