Literature DB >> 12831874

State-dependent activity of neurons in the perifornical hypothalamic area during sleep and waking.

Y Koyama1, K Takahashi, T Kodama, Y Kayama.   

Abstract

Neurons containing orexins are located in the perifornical hypothalamic area and are considered to have a role in sleep-wake regulation. To examine how this area is involved in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness, we recorded neuronal activity in undrugged, head-restrained rats across sleep-waking cycles. Recordings were made in the perifornical hypothalamic area where orexin-immunoreactive neurons are distributed (PFH), and in the area dorsal to the PFH, including the zona incerta and subincertal nucleus (collectively referred to as ZI). The 40 neurons recorded from in the PFH were divided into five groups: (1) neurons most active during paradoxical sleep (PS, n=14, 35%), (2) neurons active during both waking (W) and PS (n=12, 30%), (3) neurons most active during W (n=7, 18%), (4) neurons most active during slow-wave sleep (SWS, n=3, 7.5%), and (5) neurons whose activity had no correlation with sleep-waking states (n=4, 10%). Of 30 neurons recorded from in the ZI, the corresponding numbers were 13 (43%), seven (23%), six (20%), three (10%), and one (3.3%). In both areas, neuronal activity fluctuated more during PS than during W. Waking-specific neurons (group 3) in the PFH generated action potentials with longer durations than those produced by other types of neurons. About half of the neurons in the PFH that were classified in groups 1, 2, and 3 increased their firing rate after the transition from one state to another, while higher percentages of neurons of groups 1 and 2 in the ZI than those in the PFH increased their firing rate prior to the state shift from SWS to PS. In these ZI neurons, however, the firing rate varied considerably at the state shift. These results suggest that the PFH and ZI are involved in the regulation of PS or W, especially the regulation of phasic events during PS or the maintenance of W. The ZI appears to be more closely involved than the PFH in the induction of PS or some phasic phenomena associated with PS.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12831874     DOI: 10.1016/s0306-4522(03)00173-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroscience        ISSN: 0306-4522            Impact factor:   3.590


  39 in total

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2.  Regulation of Lateral Hypothalamic Orexin Activity by Local GABAergic Neurons.

Authors:  Loris L Ferrari; Daniel Park; Lin Zhu; Matthew R Palmer; Rebecca Y Broadhurst; Elda Arrigoni
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3.  Behavioral correlates of activity in identified hypocretin/orexin neurons.

Authors:  Boris Y Mileykovskiy; Lyudmila I Kiyashchenko; Jerome M Siegel
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4.  State-dependent gating of sensory inputs by zona incerta.

Authors:  Jason C Trageser; Kathryn A Burke; Radi Masri; Ying Li; Larisa Sellers; Asaf Keller
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Review 5.  Addiction and arousal: alternative roles of hypothalamic peptides.

Authors:  Luis de Lecea; Barbara E Jones; Benjamin Boutrel; Stephanie L Borgland; Seiji Nishino; Michael Bubser; Ralph DiLeone
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6.  The median preoptic nucleus reciprocally modulates activity of arousal-related and sleep-related neurons in the perifornical lateral hypothalamus.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2007-02-14       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  GABA-mediated control of hypocretin- but not melanin-concentrating hormone-immunoreactive neurones during sleep in rats.

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8.  Disinhibition of perifornical hypothalamic neurones activates noradrenergic neurones and blocks pontine carbachol-induced REM sleep-like episodes in rats.

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Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2007-05-10       Impact factor: 5.182

9.  Irritability, psychomotor agitation and progressive insomnia induced by bilateral stimulation of the area surrounding the dorsal subthalamic nucleus (zona incerta) in Parkinson's disease patients.

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Review 10.  Principal cell types of sleep-wake regulatory circuits.

Authors:  Barbara E Jones
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2017-04-19       Impact factor: 6.627

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