4.7 Article

Hypothalamic Tuberomammillary Nucleus Neurons: Electrophysiological Diversity and Essential Role in Arousal Stability

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 39, Pages 9574-9592

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0580-17.2017

Keywords

arousal; histamine; membrane properties; optogenetics; slow-wave sleep; tuberomammillary

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Pathway to Independence Award [K99/R00 R00MH097792, R01MH087592]
  2. International Brain Research Organization Research Fellowship
  3. NARSAD (National Alliance for Research in Schizophrenia and Affective Disorders) Young Investigator grant
  4. Hilda and Preston Davis Foundation
  5. European Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions

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Histaminergic (HA) neurons, found in the posterior hypothalamic tuberomammillary nucleus (TMN), extend fibers throughout the brain and exert modulatory influence over numerous physiological systems. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that the activity of HA neurons is important in the regulation of vigilance despite the lack of direct, causal evidence demonstrating its requirement for the maintenance of arousal during wakefulness. Given the strong correlation between HA neuron excitability and behavioral arousal, we investigated both the electrophysiological diversity of HA neurons in brain slices and the effect of their acute silencing in vivo in male mice. For this purpose, we first validated a transgenic mouse line expressing cre recombinase in histidine decarboxylase-expressing neurons (Hdc-Cre) followed by a systematic census of the membrane properties of both HA and non-HA neurons in the ventral TMN (TMNv) region. Through unsupervised hierarchical cluster analysis, we found electrophysiological diversity both between TMNv HA and non-HA neurons, and among HA neurons. To directly determine the impact of acute cessation of HA neuron activity on sleep-wake states in awake and behaving mice, we examined the effects of optogenetic silencing of TMNv HA neurons in vivo. We found that acute silencing of HA neurons during wakefulness promotes slow-wave sleep, but not rapid eye movement sleep, during a period of low sleep pressure. Together, these data suggest that the tonic firing of HA neurons is necessary for the maintenance of wakefulness, and their silencing not only impairs arousal but is sufficient to rapidly and selectively induce slow-wave sleep.

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