Literature DB >> 32371605

The Degree of Nesting between Spindles and Slow Oscillations Modulates Neural Synchrony.

Daniel B Silversmith1,2,3, Stefan M Lemke2,3,4, Daniel Egert3, Joshua D Berke1,3,4, Karunesh Ganguly5,2,3,4.   

Abstract

Spindles and slow oscillations (SOs) both appear to play an important role in memory consolidation. Spindle and SO "nesting," or the temporal overlap between the two events, is believed to modulate consolidation. However, the neurophysiological processes modified by nesting remain poorly understood. We thus recorded activity from the primary motor cortex of 4 male sleeping rats to investigate how SO and spindles interact to modulate the correlation structure of neural firing. During spindles, primary motor cortex neurons fired at a preferred phase, with neural pairs demonstrating greater neural synchrony, or correlated firing, during spindle peaks. We found a direct relationship between the temporal proximity between SO and spindles, and changes to the distribution of neural correlations; nesting was associated with narrowing of the distribution, with a reduction in low- and high-correlation pairs. Such narrowing may be consistent with greater exploration of neural states. Interestingly, after animals practiced a novel motor task, pairwise correlations increased during nested spindles, consistent with targeted strengthening of functional interactions. These findings may be key mechanisms through which spindle nesting supports memory consolidation.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Our analysis revealed changes in cortical spiking structure that followed the waxing and waning of spindles; firing rates increased, spikes were more phase-locked to spindle-band local field potential, and synchrony across units peaked during spindles. Moreover, we showed that the degree of nesting between spindles and slow oscillations modified the correlation structure across units by narrowing the distribution of pairwise correlations. Finally, we demonstrated that engaging in a novel motor task increased pairwise correlations during nested spindles. These phenomena suggest key mechanisms through which the interaction of spindles and slow oscillations may support sensorimotor learning. More broadly, this work helps link large-scale measures of population activity to changes in spiking structure, a critical step in understanding neuroplasticity across multiple scales.
Copyright © 2020 the authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  correlation; sleep; slow oscillations; slow waves; spiking; spindle

Year:  2020        PMID: 32371605      PMCID: PMC7294805          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2682-19.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  57 in total

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  6 in total

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