Chronic sleep fragmentation enhances habenula cholinergic neural activity

被引:22
作者
Ge, Feifei [1 ,3 ]
Mu, Ping [1 ,4 ]
Guo, Rong [1 ]
Cai, Li [1 ]
Liu, Zheng [1 ]
Dong, Yan [1 ,2 ]
Huang, Yanhua H. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Psychiat, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Neurosci, Pittsburgh, PA USA
[3] Nanjing Univ Chinese Med, Sch Med & Life Sci, Dept Human Anat & Histoembryol, Nanjing 210023, Peoples R China
[4] Ludong Univ, Coll Life Sci, 186 Hongqi Middle Rd, Yantai 264025, Shandong, Peoples R China
关键词
D O I
10.1038/s41380-019-0419-z
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Sleep is essential to emotional health. Sleep disturbance, particularly REM sleep disturbance, profoundly impacts emotion regulation, but the underlying neural mechanisms remain elusive. Here we show that chronic REM sleep disturbance, achieved in mice by chronic sleep fragmentation (SF), enhanced neural activity in the medial habenula (mHb), a brain region increasingly implicated in negative affect. Specifically, after a 5-day SF procedure that selectively fragmented REM sleep, cholinergic output neurons (ChNs) in the mHb exhibited increased spontaneous firing rate and enhanced firing regularity in brain slices. The SF-induced firing changes remained intact upon inhibition of glutamate, GABA, acetylcholine, and histamine receptors, suggesting cell-autonomous mechanisms independent of synaptic transmissions. Moreover, the SF-induced hyperactivity was not because of enhanced intrinsic membrane excitability, but was accompanied by depolarized resting membrane potential in mHb ChNs. Furthermore, inhibition of TASK-3 (KCNK9) channels, a subtype of two-pore domain K+ channels, mimicked the SF effects by increasing the firing rate and regularity, as well as depolarizing the resting membrane potential in mHb ChNs in control-sleep mice. These effects of TASK-3 inhibition were absent in SF mice, suggesting reduced TASK-3 activity following SF. By contrast, inhibition of small-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (SK) channels did not produce similar effects. Thus, SF compromised TASK-3 function in mHb ChNs, which likely led to depolarized resting membrane potential and increased spontaneous firing. These results not only demonstrate that selective REM sleep disturbance leads to hyperactivity of mHb ChNs, but also identify a key molecular substrate through which REM sleep disturbance may alter affect regulation.
引用
收藏
页码:941 / 954
页数:14
相关论文
共 66 条
[1]   Molecular characterization of the subnuclei in rat habenula [J].
Aizawa, Hidenori ;
Kobayashi, Megumi ;
Tanaka, Sayaka ;
Fukai, Tomoki ;
Okamoto, Hitoshi .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 2012, 520 (18) :4051-4066
[2]   Sleep disturbance in mental health problems and neurodegenerative disease [J].
Anderson, Kirstie N. ;
Bradley, Andrew J. .
NATURE AND SCIENCE OF SLEEP, 2013, 5 :61-75
[3]   Sleep changes. in the disorder of insomnia: A meta-analysis of polysomnographic studies [J].
Baglioni, Chiara ;
Regen, Wolfram ;
Teghen, Armand ;
Spiegelhalder, Kai ;
Feige, Bernd ;
Nissen, Christoph ;
Riemann, Dieter .
SLEEP MEDICINE REVIEWS, 2014, 18 (03) :195-213
[4]   The role of pH-sensitive TASK channels in central respiratory chemoreception [J].
Bayliss, Douglas A. ;
Barhanin, Jacques ;
Gestreau, Christian ;
Guyenet, Patrice G. .
PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 2015, 467 (05) :917-929
[5]   Histamine depolarizes cholinergic interneurones in the rat striatum via a H1-receptor mediated action [J].
Bell, MI ;
Richardson, PJ ;
Lee, K .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 2000, 131 (06) :1135-1142
[6]   Losing Neutrality: The Neural Basis of Impaired Emotional Control without Sleep [J].
Ben Simon, Eti ;
Oren, Noga ;
Sharon, Haggai ;
Kirschner, Adi ;
Goldway, Noam ;
Okon-Singer, Hadas ;
Tauman, Rivi ;
Deweese, Menton M. ;
Keil, Andreas ;
Hendler, Talma .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2015, 35 (38) :13194-13205
[7]   Intrinsic membrane properties underlying spontaneous tonic firing in neostriatal cholinergic interneurons [J].
Bennett, BD ;
Callaway, JC ;
Wilson, CJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, 20 (22) :8493-8503
[8]   Striatal cholinergic interneurons express a receptor-insensitive homomeric TASK-3-like background K+ current [J].
Berg, Allison P. ;
Bayliss, Douglas A. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2007, 97 (02) :1546-1552
[9]  
Bischoff S, 1999, J COMP NEUROL, V412, P1
[10]   Two-pore domain potassium channels Variation on a structural theme [J].
Braun, Andrew P. .
CHANNELS, 2012, 6 (03) :139-140