Sleep And Neural Function 7.6.07
Transcript of Sleep And Neural Function 7.6.07
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What is sleep for?Sleep and Neural Function
July 6th, 2007
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An embarrassment of riches?
Immune Function
Muscle/organ Function
Toxin Removal
Energy Repletion
Somatic Regeneration
Neural RegenerationPredator Avoidance
Brain Cooling
Brain Development
Learning and Memory
Species Programming
Psychological Function
Ok, so maybe it does lots of things…who cares?
???????
???????
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Neuroscience and developmental biology are incomplete without an understanding of sleep function
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Ethology is incomplete without an understanding of sleep function
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Sleep medicine is incomplete without an understanding of sleep function
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Sleep medicine matters
• 40 million Americans are chronically ill with various sleep disorders.
• Another 20-30 million American experience intermittent sleep-related problems.
• Estimated direct and indirect costs to society range from 15.9-100 billion dollars (1992).
From National Commission on Sleep Disorders Research (1992,1998)
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Sleep is regulated and animals die in the absence of sleep
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So why haven’t we figured it out?
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Problem 1: Evolution and Adaptation
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Is human sleep an accumulation of functions?
1O Function
2O Function
3O Function
4O Function
5O Function
6O Function
7O Function
9O Function
8O Functionnematodes
arthropods
chordates From Raizen, 2007
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Problem 2: distinguishing function from interaction
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Problem 3: disentangling sleep from the clock
Dijk and Schantz, 2005 ; Fuller et al., 2006; Zvonic, et al., 2007
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First things first: we don’t sleep ‘cause there’s nothing else to do
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Tackling the problem
• Clues from ontogeny
• Clues from the molecular biology
• Clues from phylogeny
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REM
NREM
Clues from ontogeny: sleep is maximal when the brain is growing and
very plastic
Adapted from Roffwarg et al., 1966; Jouvet-Mounier, 1970
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• membrane trafficking & maintenance
• cholesterol biosynthesis
• synaptic plasticity
Cirelli & Tononi, 2004
Clues from molecular biology – transcription
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Clues from molecular biology – transcription
Guzman-Marin et al 1997
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Nakanishi et al 1997
Clues from molecular biology – translation
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Clues from phylogeny - In the beginning, there was sleep....?
• quiescencequiescence
• increased arousal increased arousal thresholds thresholds
• homeostatic homeostatic regulationregulation
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A function that is simple and conserved?
Species Specific & Specialized Adaptations
Species Specific & Specialized Adaptations
Common Function ?
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Do gifted and talented mollusks sleep to learn?
Brown et al., 2006
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What about gifted and talented jellyfish?
Nerve ring
Nilsson et al., 2005
• unlike other cnidaria, box jellies have complex predatory behavior
• need for sleep-like state is seemingly dependent on hunting activity
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So, do all species sleep to learn, or remember?
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What people can tell us that other animals can’t...
Stickgold et al., 2000
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What people can tell us that other animals can’t...
• "The night before Easter Sunday of that year I awoke, turned on the light, and jotted down a few notes on a tiny slip of paper. Then I fell asleep again. It occurred to me at 6 o'clock in the morning that during the night I had written down something most important, but I was unable to decipher the scrawl. The next night, at 3 o'clock, the idea returned. It was the design of an experiment to determine whether or not the hypothesis of chemical transmission that I had uttered 17 years ago was correct. I got up immediately, went to the laboratory, and performed a single experiment on a frog's heart according to the nocturnal design."
- Otto Loewi
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insights from big brains..
Huber et al., 2004
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What (we think) we know
• Sleep is a brain phenomenon• Sleep contributes to adaptive changes in
the nervous system following experience• Sleep may be crucial during periods of
rapid brain growth and plasticity• Sleep may be a time when neurons are
rebuilt, remade, or tuned up• Sleep plays some role in learning and
memory
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All of the big questions are unanswered
• Is sleep the same in all organisms? Is there any difference in function at the neuron level?
• Is sleep evolve once or many times?• Why can’t we do this stuff while were
awake?• Why REM and NREM sleep? Why do they
occur sequentially?• And what do REM and NREM do??
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Its unclear where sleep contributes to learning and memory..
• Encoding• Storage
(consolidation, reconsolidation)
• Maintenance and stabilization
• Retrieval• Forgetting
• Declarative– episodic– semantic
• Non-Declarative– procedural/skill– conditioning
– priming– non-associative
What stages? What types?
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What kind of activity is necessary? Chronic neuronal recording
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Scalar measures and relation to sleep stage
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Overview
• Developmental brain plasticity—what is it?• How we measure it.• What does sleep have to do with it (lots)?• How does this help us understand sleep
function?
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Ocular dominance plasticity
• Occurs in the intact brain in vivo.• Produced by natural forms of inputs (changes in vision: not tetany in vitro).• Has adaptive signif icance to the animal (stereoscopic vision and acuity).• Can be tr iggered with a few hours of input (easy to design experiments).• Measured in standard ways in many labs.• Well described on a cellular level (NMDA receptors, kinases, etc.)• Has provided insights into brain plast icity across the l i fespan and in many
parts of the brain.
David Hubel Torsten N. Wiesel
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Cortical plasticity triggered by MD: Optical maps
Non-deprived eye Deprived eye
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Cortical plasticity triggered by MD: Unit physiology
0
50
100
1 2 3 4 5 6 7Ocular Dominance
Num
ber
of C
ells
0
50
100
MD
Normal: cortical neurons driven by both eyes
MD: most neurons driven by non-deprived eye
right eye left eyeBoth eyes
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A simple experiment
• Experience (MD) only
• MD + ad lib sleep in dark
• MD + wake in dark
• 12 hours of MD
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Sleep enhances loss of function in deprived eye pathways
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Sleep-dependent plasticity requires cortical activity in sleep
Modified from Hata and Stryker 1994; Frank et al., 2006
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What we know so far—and what we suspect.
Sleep Enhances ODP
Activity-dependent
CREBpathways?
NMDA, AMPAVGCCs,GABA?
PKA, cAMKII ERK
Calcineurin?
Genes up?
Genes down?
Protein synthesis?
ECM?
Changes in spines?
Activity changes
Thalamo-cort ical?
Intra-cortical?
Intrinsic or Network?
Excitatory/ inhibitory?
REM sleep? NREM sleep?
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112 Johnson Pavilion Dept. of Neuroscience University
of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104
Dr.’s Naoum Issa and Michael Stryker
Dr. Sushil Jha: Reversible inactivation, chronic recording
Dr.‘s Sara Aton and Julie Seibt: NMDAR-protein synthesis
Past graduate students: Brian Jones, Laila Dadvand
Students: Nick Steinmetz
Lab technician: Tammi Coleman