Net decrease in spine-surface GluA1-containing AMPA receptors after post-learning sleep in the adult mouse cortex

Daisuke Miyamoto, William Marshall, Giulio Tononi*, Chiara Cirelli*

*この論文の責任著者

研究成果: ジャーナルへの寄稿学術論文査読

35 被引用数 (Scopus)

抄録

The mechanisms by which sleep benefits learning and memory remain unclear. Sleep may further strengthen the synapses potentiated by learning or promote broad synaptic weakening while protecting the newly potentiated synapses. We tested these ideas by combining a motor task whose consolidation is sleep-dependent, a marker of synaptic AMPA receptor plasticity, and repeated two-photon imaging to track hundreds of spines in vivo with single spine resolution. In mouse motor cortex, sleep leads to an overall net decrease in spine-surface GluA1-containing AMPA receptors, both before and after learning. Molecular changes in single spines during post-learning sleep are correlated with changes in performance after sleep. The spines in which learning leads to the largest increase in GluA1 expression have a relative advantage after post-learning sleep compared to sleep deprivation, because sleep weakens all remaining spines. These results are obtained in adult mice, showing that sleep-dependent synaptic down-selection also benefits the mature brain.

本文言語英語
論文番号2881
ジャーナルNature Communications
12
1
DOI
出版ステータス出版済み - 2021/12/01

ASJC Scopus 主題領域

  • 化学一般
  • 生化学、遺伝学、分子生物学一般
  • 物理学および天文学一般

フィンガープリント

「Net decrease in spine-surface GluA1-containing AMPA receptors after post-learning sleep in the adult mouse cortex」の研究トピックを掘り下げます。これらがまとまってユニークなフィンガープリントを構成します。

引用スタイル