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  3. Deficient synaptic neurotransmission results in a persistent sleep-like cortical activity across vigilance states in mice.
 

Deficient synaptic neurotransmission results in a persistent sleep-like cortical activity across vigilance states in mice.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/87275
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.cub.2025.02.053
PubMed ID
40118064
Description
Growing evidence suggests that brain activity during sleep, as well as sleep regulation, are tightly linked with synaptic function and network excitability at the local and global levels. We previously reported that a mutation in synaptobrevin 2 (Vamp2) in restless (rlss) mice results in a marked increase of wakefulness and suppression of sleep, in particular REM sleep (REMS), as well as increased consolidation of sleep and wakefulness. In this study, using finer-scale in vivo electrophysiology recordings, we report that spontaneous cortical activity in rlss mice during NREM sleep (NREMS) is characterized by an occurrence of abnormally prolonged periods of complete neuronal silence (OFF-periods), often lasting several seconds, similar to the burst suppression pattern typically seen under deep anesthesia. Increased incidence of prolonged network OFF-periods was not specific to NREMS but also present in REMS and wake in rlss mice. Slow-wave activity (SWA) was generally increased in rlss mice relative to controls, while higher frequencies, including theta-frequency activity, were decreased, further resulting in diminished differences between vigilance states. The relative increase in SWA after sleep deprivation was attenuated in rlss mice, suggesting either that rlss mice experience persistently elevated sleep pressure or, alternatively, that the intrusion of sleep-like patterns of activity into the wake state attenuates the accumulation of sleep drive. We propose that a deficit in global synaptic neurotransmitter release leads to "state inertia," reflected in an abnormal propensity of brain networks to enter and remain in a persistent "default state" resembling coma or deep anesthesia.
Date of Publication
2025-04-21
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
100 - Philosophy::150 - Psychology
Keyword(s)
VAMP2
•
neural inertia
•
sleep
•
sleep architecture
•
sleep homeostasis
•
sleep-wake control/regulation
•
state inertia
•
synaptobrevin 2
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Guillaumin, Mathilde C C
Harding, Christian D
Krone, Lukas B.orcid-logo
University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
Yamagata, Tomoko
Kahn, Martin C
Blanco-Duque, Cristina
Banks, Gareth T
Diniz Behn, Cecilia
Achermann, Peter
Nolan, Patrick M
Peirson, Stuart N
Vyazovskiy, Vladyslav V
Additional Credits
University Hospital of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
Series
Current Biology
Publisher
Cell Press
ISSN
1879-0445
0960-9822
Access(Rights)
open.access
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