| Literature DB >> 35065715 |
Yu-Ting Tseng1, Binghao Zhao1, Shanping Chen2, Jialin Ye2, Jingjing Liu2, Lisha Liang2, Hui Ding1, Bernhard Schaefke3, Qin Yang1, Lina Wang2, Feng Wang1, Liping Wang4.
Abstract
When an animal faces a threatening situation while asleep, rapid arousal is the essential prerequisite for an adequate response. Here, we find that predator stimuli induce immediate arousal from REM sleep compared with NREM sleep. Using in vivo neural activity recording and cell-type-specific manipulations, we identify neurons in the medial subthalamic nucleus (mSTN) expressing corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) that mediate arousal and defensive responses to acute predator threats received through multiple sensory modalities across REM sleep and wakefulness. We observe involvement of the same neurons in the normal regulation of REM sleep and the adaptive increase in REM sleep induced by sustained predator stress. Projections to the lateral globus pallidus (LGP) are the effector pathway for the threat-coping responses and REM-sleep expression. Together, our findings suggest adaptive REM-sleep responses could be protective against threats and uncover a critical component of the neural circuitry at their basis.Entities:
Keywords: CRH; REM sleep; arousal; defensive responses; predator stimuli; subthalamic nucleus
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35065715 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.12.033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuron ISSN: 0896-6273 Impact factor: 17.173