sleep and arousal lecture 9 nrs201s john yeomans

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Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

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Page 1: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Sleep and Arousal

Lecture 9

NRS201S

John Yeomans

Page 2: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

EEG Changes in Sleep

• Waking: Alpha (10 Hz) and beta/gamma waves (40 Hz).

• Slow-Wave sleep: From alpha to spindles (14 Hz) and delta (1-4 Hz).

• REM sleep: Cortical arousal and muscular atonia. Also called paradoxical or dream sleep.

• Triggered in pontine reticular formation.

Page 3: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Gamma

Alpha

Hours

Page 4: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

REM Sleep

• Brain is active, and eyes are active.

• Muscles of body are profoundly inhibited (atonia).

• Subjects report dreams, when awoken.

• NE and 5HT neurons silent. Ch neurons active.

• In slow-wave sleep, brain and eyes are quiet, but muscles are more active.

Page 5: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Transection studies

Page 6: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Brain Areas--Early Studies

• Coma (prolonged unconsciousness) due to injury in dorsal reticular formation.

• Stimulation of RF leads to arousal.

• Ascending path for cortical arousal.

• Descending path for atonia.

• Critical area in dorsal pontine reticular formation.

Page 7: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Diffuse Arousal Systems

• Locus coeruleus Norepinephrine neurons (A6).

• Mesopontine Cholinergic neurons (Ch5,6).• Raphe Serotonin neurons (B5,6).• Tuberomammilary Histamine neurons.• Lateral hypothalamus Orexin/Hypocretin

neurons.• Basal forebrain Cholinergic neurons (Ch1-

4).

Page 8: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans
Page 9: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Norepinephrine and Serotonin

Active in Waking and in Slow-Wave Sleep

Page 10: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Cholinergic Arousal SystemsActive in Waking and REM Sleep

Basal Forebrain Ch1-4)

Mesopontine Ch5,6

Page 11: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Model of REM Sleep Systems

Page 12: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Sleep Disorders

• Insomnia (too little sleep).• Sleep apnea (loss of breathing in REM,

too much atonia?).• Narcolepsy/cataplexy (daytime sleepiness

and REM/atonia attacks).• Triggered by arousal (e.g. laughing,

running).• Due to loss of orexin/hypocretin neurons in

humans, or receptors in dogs and mice.

Page 13: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans
Page 14: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Narcolepsy

• Orexin 2 receptors lost in dogs (Mignon).

• O/H neurons lost in humans.

• O/H gene or receptors in mice.

• O/H neurons active in waking arousal, and needed to inhibit atonia.

• In narcolepsy, arousal can activate REM/atonia neurons, if O/H signal is lost.

• Which neurons and how? Ch5,6?

Page 15: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Loss of O/H neurons:Daytime sleepiness,Cataplexy (atonia) inducedby arousal.

Page 16: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Circadian Rhythms

March 17, 2006

PSY391S

John Yeomans

Page 17: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Timing of Motivated Behaviors• When is best season to feed and mate?

Seasonal periods of activity and breeding based on availability of food. Based on axis of earth around sun.

• When is best time of day to feed? Diurnal/nocturnal to find food and avoid predators. Based on earth’s rotation relative to sun.

• Circadian clock built into all plants and animals to help survival.

Page 18: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Measuring Rhythms in Hamsters

Page 19: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Rhythms

• Endogenous clock: Measured in constant conditions, still 23-25 hr. “free running”

• Rhythm is lost when SCN lesioned in mammals, or pineal gland in birds.

• Rhythm is restored by transplanting new SCN. Period of donor SCN.

• Tau mutant hamster has 20 hr rhythm.• Therefore, SCN is endogenous clock for

activity.

Page 20: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Free running 24.1 hr

No rhythm

19.8 hr rhythm of donor SCN

Tau mutant SCN

Ralph et al. 1990

Page 21: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Retinal Paths to SCN and IGL

Page 22: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Entrainment• Entrainment by light, temperature, or arousing stimuli.• Photic entrainment in mammals due to retinohypothalamic path to SCN.• Rods and cones not needed for entrainment!• Search for new receptors in ganglion cell layer led to melanopsin.• Melanopsin ganglion cells directly activated by light, indirectly by rods and cones.• Huge dendrites and receptive fields, insensitive to light, but stable (no adaptation)

Page 23: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans
Page 24: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Projections of Melanopsin Neurons

• Melanopsin neurons provide most of input

to SCN.

• Provide input to pretectal nucleus for

pupillary reflex.

• Provide input to intergeniculate leaflet of

thalamus. IGLSCN.

• IGL needed for arousing inputs to clock.

Page 25: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Entrainment by Arousal

• Clock can be shifted by food, exercise, footshock and sex.

• Allow animals to adjust rhythms to biologically significant opportunities.

• Like light, shift can be up to 3 hours.

• Shifts depend on phase—Light shifts best in dark phase, arousal shifts best in light phase.

Page 26: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Intergeniculate Leaflet: Arousal Shifts Circadian Rhythms

Cain et al. 2001

Page 27: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Arousal Shifts Circadian Rhythms in Hamsters

Cain et al. 2001* Arousal (footshock, exercise, reward)

Page 28: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Evolution of Retina?

• How could eye evolve? Greatest problem for Cajal.

• Circadian clock with direct access to light.• Light detectors, no spatial information—direct

input to clock.• Eye cup—Spatial information, focussing, with

pupil and lens later.• Dark and light vision (cones and rods) with

adaptation.• Two eyeballs with muscles, for distance

perception and fast movements in space.

Page 29: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Non-photic entrainment:IGL to SCN

SCNClock

?

Page 30: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Circadian Genes

• How does endogenous clock work?• Clock mechanism found in plants, simple

animals and many body cells.• Clock genes found in mutant fruit flies. How?• Take the flies who fly at odd hours. Map genes.• per: No rhythm, long rhythms, short rhythms.• Tim, cry, dbt.• Map genes onto 4 fly chromosomes.• Study functions of proteins: PER, TIM, DBT.

Page 31: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Mutations Alter Rhythms in Flys and Mice

• per, tim are needed for 24 hr rhythms.

• Mutations lead to short, long or no rhythm.

• dbt mutations alter enzyme, casein kinase, leading to short rhythm in Drosophila.

• Homologous genes (per1-3, cry, tau) found in mice and humans.

• Transcription factors Clock and Cycle start each cycle. These are also regulated.

Page 32: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Clock Genes and Negative Feedback

• per, cry genes transcribed in nucleus.• Per, Cry proteins are translated in

cytoplasm.• Per/Cry dimers inhibit Clock/Cycle

transcription factors in nucleus.• Less Per, Cry less inhibition.• New per, cry transcribed 24 hrs later.• Tau gene makes a casein kinase that

degrades Per.

Page 33: Sleep and Arousal Lecture 9 NRS201S John Yeomans

Molecular Model of Clock

Photic inputfrom retina

Nonphotic input from thalamus IGL?

Gene transcriptionproteins

Negative feedback loop