| Literature DB >> 29213231 |
Daisuke Miyamoto1,2, Daichi Hirai1, Masanori Murayama1.
Abstract
Sleep plays important roles in sensory and motor memory consolidation. Sleep oscillations, reflecting neural population activity, involve the reactivation of learning-related neurons and regulate synaptic strength and, thereby affect memory consolidation. Among sleep oscillations, slow waves (0.5-4 Hz) are closely associated with memory consolidation. For example, slow-wave power is regulated in an experience-dependent manner and correlates with acquired memory. Furthermore, manipulating slow waves can enhance or impair memory consolidation. During slow wave sleep, inter-areal interactions between the cortex and hippocampus (HC) have been proposed to consolidate declarative memory; however, interactions for non-declarative (HC-independent) memory remain largely uninvestigated. We recently showed that the directional influence in a slow-wave range through a top-down cortical long-range circuit is involved in the consolidation of non-declarative memory. At the synaptic level, the average cortical synaptic strength is known to be potentiated during wakefulness and depressed during sleep. Moreover, learning causes plasticity in a subset of synapses, allocating memory to them. Sleep may help to differentiate synaptic strength between allocated and non-allocated synapses (i.e., improving the signal-to-noise ratio, which may facilitate memory consolidation). Herein, we offer perspectives on inter-areal interactions and synaptic plasticity for memory consolidation during sleep.Entities:
Keywords: cortex; hippocampus; memory; oscillation; sleep; synaptic plasticity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29213231 PMCID: PMC5703076 DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2017.00092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neural Circuits ISSN: 1662-5110 Impact factor: 3.492
Figure 1Interareal interactions among cortices and hippocampus (HC) for memory consolidation. (A) HC bidirectionally interacts with frontal cortex (FC) and sensory cortex (SC) through entorhinal cortex during sleep, which may contribute to consolidation of HC-dependent memory. (B) In HC-independent perceptual memory, top-down inputs from the FC to SC during sleep consolidate memory.
Figure 2Optogenetic cortical stimulation in slow-wave rhythm for enhancing or impairing memory consolidation. (A) Optogenetic activation of secondary motor cortex (M2) and primary somatosensory cortex (S1) with local field potential (LFP) recordings using single electrodes. See “Methods” in Miyamoto et al. (2016). (B) LFPs and multiunit activity (MUA) recordings from M2 (top) and S1 (bottom) during resting-non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep with synchronous photostimulation. (C,D) Task performance after photostimulation during resting-NREM sleep. (E) (Left) Behavioral paradigm. After the sampling period, transgenic mice were deprived of sleep for 1 h with synchronized coactivation of M2 and S1. (Right) Photostimulation protocol. The photostimulation (2 Hz) during the sleep deprivation (SD) experiment was applied according to the NREM sleep pattern from mouse A. (F) Summary of task performance after photostimulation. The cumulative illumination time was 30 min. Statistical significance from 50% chance level (#P < 0.05) was assessed by a 1-sample t test. Panels (A–C,E) and a part of (F) from Miyamoto et al. (2016). Reprinted with permission from AAAS.