睡眠(系统调用)
海马结构
睡眠不足
神经科学
听力学
计算机科学
认知心理学
心理学
医学
昼夜节律
睡眠剥夺
操作系统
作者
Bapun Giri,Nathaniel R. Kinsky,Utku Kaya,Kourosh Maboudi,Ted Abel,Kamran Diba
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2024-06-12
卷期号:630 (8018): 935-942
被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-024-07538-2
摘要
Memories benefit from sleep1, and the reactivation and replay of waking experiences during hippocampal sharp-wave ripples (SWRs) are considered to be crucial for this process2. However, little is known about how these patterns are impacted by sleep loss. Here we recorded CA1 neuronal activity over 12 h in rats across maze exploration, sleep and sleep deprivation, followed by recovery sleep. We found that SWRs showed sustained or higher rates during sleep deprivation but with lower power and higher frequency ripples. Pyramidal cells exhibited sustained firing during sleep deprivation and reduced firing during sleep, yet their firing rates were comparable during SWRs regardless of sleep state. Despite the robust firing and abundance of SWRs during sleep deprivation, we found that the reactivation and replay of neuronal firing patterns was diminished during these periods and, in some cases, completely abolished compared to ad libitum sleep. Reactivation partially rebounded after recovery sleep but failed to reach the levels found in natural sleep. These results delineate the adverse consequences of sleep loss on hippocampal function at the network level and reveal a dissociation between the many SWRs elicited during sleep deprivation and the few reactivations and replays that occur during these events. A study of neuronal activity in rats finds that sleep loss adversely affects hippocampal function and memory by dissociating hippocampal sharp-wave ripples from memory replay and reactivation events.
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