4.7 Article

Integrity of Corpus Callosum Is Essential for the Cross-Hemispheric Propagation of Sleep Slow Waves: A High-Density EEG Study in Split-Brain Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 29, Pages 5589-5603

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2571-19.2020

Keywords

connectivity; corpus callosum; NREM; sleep; slow wave

Categories

Funding

  1. IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca
  2. Marche Polytechnic University [215267/Z/19/Z]
  3. Wellcome Trust Seed Award in Science Grant [215267/Z/19/Z]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation Ambizione Grant [PZ00P3_173955]
  5. Divesa Foundation Switzerland
  6. Pierre-Mercier Foundation for Science
  7. Bourse Pro-Femme of the University of Lausanne
  8. Foundation for the University of Lausanne
  9. Wellcome Trust [215267/Z/19/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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The slow waves of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep reflect experience-dependent plasticity and play a direct role in the restorative functions of sleep. Importantly, slow waves behave as traveling waves, and their propagation is assumed to occur through cortico-cortical white matter connections. In this light, the corpus callosum (CC) may represent the main responsible for cross-hemispheric slow-wave propagation. To verify this hypothesis, we performed overnight high-density (hd)-EEG recordings in five patients who underwent total callosotomy due to drug-resistant epilepsy (CPs; two females), in three noncallosotomized neurologic patients (NPs; two females), and in a sample of 24 healthy adult subjects (HSs; 13 females). In all CPs slow waves displayed a significantly reduced probability of cross-hemispheric propagation and a stronger interhemispheric asymmetry. In both CPs and HSs, the incidence of large slow waves within individual NREM epochs tended to differ across hemispheres, with a relative overall predominance of the right over the left hemisphere. The absolute magnitude of this asymmetry was greater in CPs relative to HSs. However, the CC resection had no significant effects on the distribution of slow-wave origin probability across hemispheres. The present results indicate that CC integrity is essential for the cross-hemispheric traveling of slow waves in human sleep, which is in line with the assumption of a direct relationship between white matter integrity and slow-wave propagation. Our findings also revealed a residual cross-hemispheric slow-wave propagation that may rely on alternative pathways, including cortico-subcortico-cortical loops. Finally, these data indicate that the lack of the CC does not lead to differences in slow-wave generation across brain hemispheres.

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