» Articles » PMID: 27174984

Causal Evidence for the Role of REM Sleep Theta Rhythm in Contextual Memory Consolidation

Overview
Journal Science
Specialty Science
Date 2016 May 14
PMID 27174984
Citations 271
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) has been linked with spatial and emotional memory consolidation. However, establishing direct causality between neural activity during REMS and memory consolidation has proven difficult because of the transient nature of REMS and significant caveats associated with REMS deprivation techniques. In mice, we optogenetically silenced medial septum γ-aminobutyric acid-releasing (MS(GABA)) neurons, allowing for temporally precise attenuation of the memory-associated theta rhythm during REMS without disturbing sleeping behavior. REMS-specific optogenetic silencing of MS(GABA) neurons selectively during a REMS critical window after learning erased subsequent novel object place recognition and impaired fear-conditioned contextual memory. Silencing MS(GABA) neurons for similar durations outside REMS episodes had no effect on memory. These results demonstrate that MS(GABA) neuronal activity specifically during REMS is required for normal memory consolidation.

Citing Articles

REM sleep quality is associated with balanced tonic activity of the locus coeruleus during wakefulness.

Mortazavi N, Talwar P, Koshmanova E, Sharifpour R, Beckers E, Berger A J Biomed Sci. 2025; 32(1):35.

PMID: 40069818 PMC: 11900061. DOI: 10.1186/s12929-025-01127-9.


Optogenetic modulation of long-range cortical circuits in awake nonhuman primates.

Andrei A, Dragoi V Nat Protoc. 2025; .

PMID: 39905198 DOI: 10.1038/s41596-024-01123-7.


Post-conditioning sleep deprivation facilitates delay and trace fear memory extinction.

Miyamoto D, Mahmoud M Mol Brain. 2024; 17(1):90.

PMID: 39614358 PMC: 11605955. DOI: 10.1186/s13041-024-01163-w.


Neural oscillations and memory: unraveling the mechanisms of anesthesia-induced amnesia.

Liu H, Yang Z, Chen Y, Yang F, Cao X, Zhou G Front Neurosci. 2024; 18:1492103.

PMID: 39610865 PMC: 11602479. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1492103.


Oxidative Stress-mediated Loss of Hippocampal Parvalbumin Interneurons Contributes to Memory Precision Decline After Acute Sleep Deprivation.

Gao Y, Liu K, Wu X, Shi C, He Q, Wu H Mol Neurobiol. 2024; .

PMID: 39546120 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-024-04628-0.