Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Oct 2022)
Artificial sleep-like up/down-states induce synaptic plasticity in cortical neurons from mouse brain slices
Abstract
During non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep, cortical neuron activity alternates between a depolarized (firing, up-state) and a hyperpolarized state (down-state) coinciding with delta electroencephalogram (EEG) slow-wave oscillation (SWO, 0. 5–4 Hz) in vivo. Recently, we have found that artificial sleep-like up/down-states can potentiate synaptic strength in layer V cortical neurons ex vivo. Using mouse coronal brain slices, whole cell voltage-clamp recordings were made from layer V cortical pyramidal neurons to record spontaneous excitatory synaptic currents (sEPSCs) and inhibitory synaptic currents (sIPSCs). Artificial sleep-like up/down-states (as SWOs, 0.5 Hz, 10 min, current clamp mode) were induced by injecting sinusoidal currents into layer V cortical neurons. Baseline pre-SWO recordings were recorded for 5 min and post-SWO recordings for at least 25–30 min. Compared to pre-SWO sEPSCs or sIPSCs, post-SWO sEPSCs or sIPSCs in layer V cortical neurons exhibited significantly larger amplitudes and a higher frequency for 30 min. This finding suggests that both sEPSCs and sIPSCs could be potentiated in layer V cortical neurons by the low-level activity of SWOs, and sEPSCs and sIPSCs maintained a balance in layer V cortical neurons during pre- and post-SWO periods. Overall, this study presents an ex vivo method to show SWO's ability to induce synaptic plasticity in layer V cortical neurons, which may underlie sleep-related synaptic potentiation for sleep-related memory consolidation in vivo.
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