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REM Sleep and Memory

$334,073R01FY2016MHNIH

University Of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA

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Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): We hypothesize that the absence of NE in the forebrain during REM sleep and the spindle-rich transition to REM sleep (TR) allows for synaptic depotentiation underlying normal assimilation of new memories into the global memory network schema. Post-traumatic stress disorder is one condition associated with abnormally high noradrenergic tone, intense dreaming and intrusive memories. We hypothesize that an abnormal presence of norepinephrine (NE) during sleep prevents the important depotentiation process of normal memory consolidation and thus prevents novel memories from being integrated with familiar memories in the neocortical memory network. We will record from the hippocampus and LC simultaneously to determine whether hippocampal reactivation during non-REM sleep occurs differently in the absence of NE (i.e. during spindle production). We will examine hippocampal reactivation events for changes indicative of plasticity, like burst spike attenuation changes, Causal Entropy and Functional Clustering. We will examine spike firing patterns in relation to local electrical field potentials and expect to see familiar, already consolidated memories activated differently than novel memories as we have seen during REM sleep, and that such replay will be phase specific during non-REM sleep spindles just as they are phase specific to theta in REM sleep. We hypothesize that LC silence is necessary to generate spindles in the first place as well as for the synaptic strengthening and weakening effects of spindle-phase associated firing. To test the necessity for NE to be absent we will stimulate the LC at sub-arousal levels (~3 Hz) during sleep whenever we see spindles in the cortex or hippocampus through to the next awakening. We expect a marked reduction in the number of spindles generated, a loss of the depotentiation that hippocampal replay in non-REM sleep produces, and impaired memory consolidation especially for reversal tasks. This research will have strong implications for the development of effective strategies to selectively downscale synaptic networks reactivated during the dreaming and spindle stages of sleep the overly strong retention of which is debilitating in those unable to normalize and integrate their traumatic memories.

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