4.8 Article

Sleep loss drives acetylcholine- and somatostatin interneuron-mediated gating of hippocampal activity to inhibit memory consolidation

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2019318118

关键词

consolidation; sleep deprivation; interneurons; acetylcholine; bioinformatics

资金

  1. NIH [DP2MH104119, R01NS118440]
  2. Human Frontiers Science Program [N023241-00_RG105]
  3. Rackham Merit Fellowships
  4. Bioinformatics Core of the University of Michigan Biomedical Research Core Facilities

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Sleep loss disrupts the consolidation of hippocampus-dependent memory by activating hippocampal somatostatin-expressing interneurons and cholinergic and orexinergic hippocampal inputs. The activation or inhibition of these cell populations can gate activity in granule cells and affect memory consolidation. Additional features of sleeping brain activity are also required for memory consolidation, suggesting a complex mechanism involving cholinergic input and local Sst+ interneurons in mediating state-dependent gating of DG activity.
Sleep loss disrupts consolidation of hippocampus-dependent memory. To characterize effects of learning and sleep loss, we quantified activity-dependent phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6 (pS6) across the dorsal hippocampus of mice. We find that pS6 is enhanced in dentate gyrus (DG) following single-trial contextual fear conditioning (CFC) but is reduced throughout the hippocampus after brief sleep deprivation (SD; which disrupts contextual fear memory [CFM] consolidation). To characterize neuronal populations affected by SD, we used translating ribosome affinity purification sequencing to identify cell type-specific transcripts on pS6 ribosomes (pS6-TRAP). Cell type-specific enrichment analysis revealed that SD selectively activated hippocampal somatostatin-expressing (Sst+) interneurons and cholinergic and orexinergic hippocampal inputs. To understand the functional consequences of SD-elevated Sst+ interneuron activity, we used pharmacogenetics to activate or inhibit hippocampal Sst+ interneurons or cholinergic input from the medial septum. The activation of either cell population was sufficient to disrupt sleep-dependent CFM consolidation by gating activity in granule cells. The inhibition of either cell population during sleep promoted CFM consolidation and increased S6 phosphorylation among DG granule cells, suggesting their disinhibition by these manipulations. The inhibition of either population across post-CFC SD was insufficient to fully rescue CFM deficits, suggesting that additional features of sleeping brain activity are required for consolidation. Together, our data suggest that state-dependent gating of DG activity may be mediated by cholinergic input and local Sst+ interneurons. This mechanism could act as a sleep loss-driven inhibitory gate on hippocampal information processing.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.8
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据