4.8 Article

A claustrum in reptiles and its role in slow-wave sleep

Journal

NATURE
Volume 578, Issue 7795, Pages 413-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1993-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) (ERC) [322705]
  3. European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (ERC) [834446]
  4. DFG [CRC1080]
  5. JSPS
  6. Kanae Foundation for the promotion of medical science
  7. EMBO long-term fellowship [ALTF 421-2017]
  8. European Research Council (ERC) [322705, 834446] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The mammalian claustrum, owing to its widespread connectivity with other forebrain structures, has been hypothesized to mediate functions that range from decision-making to consciousness(1). Here we report that a homologue of the claustrum, identified by single-cell transcriptomics and viral tracing of connectivity, also exists in a reptile-the Australian bearded dragon Pogona vitticeps. In Pogona, the claustrum underlies the generation of sharp waves during slow-wave sleep. The sharp waves, together with superimposed high-frequency ripples(2), propagate to the entire neighbouring pallial dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR). Unilateral or bilateral lesions of the claustrum suppress the production of sharp-wave ripples during slow-wave sleep in a unilateral or bilateral manner, respectively, but do not affect the regular and rapidly alternating sleep rhythm that is characteristic of sleep in this species(3). The claustrum is thus not involved in the generation of the sleep rhythm itself. Tract tracing revealed that the reptilian claustrum projects widely to a variety of forebrain areas, including the cortex, and that it receives converging inputs from, among others, areas of the mid- and hindbrain that are known to be involved in wake-sleep control in mammals(4-6). Periodically modulating the concentration of serotonin in the claustrum, for example, caused a matching modulation of sharp-wave production there and in the neighbouring DVR. Using transcriptomic approaches, we also identified a claustrum in the turtle Trachemys scripta, a distant reptilian relative of lizards. The claustrum is therefore an ancient structure that was probably already present in the brain of the common vertebrate ancestor of reptiles and mammals. It may have an important role in the control of brain states owing to the ascending input it receives from the mid- and hindbrain, its widespread projections to the forebrain and its role in sharp-wave generation during slow-wave sleep. A structure homologous to the mammalian claustrum exists in reptiles and has a role in generating sharp waves in the brain during slow-wave sleep.

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