| Literature DB >> 35798980 |
Celia Kjaerby1, Mie Andersen2, Natalie Hauglund2, Verena Untiet2, Camilla Dall2, Björn Sigurdsson2, Fengfei Ding3,4, Jiesi Feng5, Yulong Li5,6,7, Pia Weikop2, Hajime Hirase2, Maiken Nedergaard8,9.
Abstract
Sleep has a complex micro-architecture, encompassing micro-arousals, sleep spindles and transitions between sleep stages. Fragmented sleep impairs memory consolidation, whereas spindle-rich and delta-rich non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep promote it. However, the relationship between micro-arousals and memory-promoting aspects of sleep remains unclear. In this study, we used fiber photometry in mice to examine how release of the arousal mediator norepinephrine (NE) shapes sleep micro-architecture. Here we show that micro-arousals are generated in a periodic pattern during NREM sleep, riding on the peak of locus-coeruleus-generated infraslow oscillations of extracellular NE, whereas descending phases of NE oscillations drive spindles. The amplitude of NE oscillations is crucial for shaping sleep micro-architecture related to memory performance: prolonged descent of NE promotes spindle-enriched intermediate state and REM sleep but also associates with awakenings, whereas shorter NE descents uphold NREM sleep and micro-arousals. Thus, the NE oscillatory amplitude may be a target for improving sleep in sleep disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35798980 DOI: 10.1038/s41593-022-01102-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Neurosci ISSN: 1097-6256 Impact factor: 28.771