Regulation of REM and Non-REM Sleep by Periaqueductal GABAergic Neurons

0301 basic medicine Science Polysomnography Medical Physiology Sleep, REM Article Mice 03 medical and health sciences Pons Neural Pathways Animals Periaqueductal Gray GABAergic Neurons Biomedical and Clinical Sciences Electromyography Q Neurosciences Brain Ultradian Rhythm Electroencephalography Mental Health REM Neurological Calcium Sleep Research Sleep
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-02765-w Publication Date: 2018-01-18T12:41:32Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractMammalian sleep consists of distinct rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) states. The midbrain region ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG) is known to be important for gating REM sleep, but the underlying neuronal mechanism is not well understood. Here, we show that activating vlPAG GABAergic neurons in mice suppresses the initiation and maintenance of REM sleep while consolidating NREM sleep, partly through their projection to the dorsolateral pons. Cell-type-specific recording and calcium imaging reveal that most vlPAG GABAergic neurons are strongly suppressed at REM sleep onset and activated at its termination. In addition to the rapid changes at brain state transitions, their activity decreases gradually between REM sleep and is reset by each REM episode in a duration-dependent manner, mirroring the accumulation and dissipation of REM sleep pressure. Thus, vlPAG GABAergic neurons powerfully gate REM sleep, and their firing rate modulation may contribute to the ultradian rhythm of REM/NREM alternation.
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