doctoralThesis
Corticalização de memória dependente do hipocampo durante o sono REM - Investigando as janelas temporais precoce (0 - 3 h) e tardia (8 - 16 h) após o aprendizado
Fecha
2019-02-25Registro en:
ALMEIDA FILHO, Daniel Gomes de. Corticalização de memória dependente do hipocampo durante o sono REM - Investigando as janelas temporais precoce (0 - 3 h) e tardia (8 - 16 h) após o aprendizado. 2019. 223f. Tese (Doutorado em Neurociências) - Instituto do Cérebro, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2019.
Autor
Almeida Filho, Daniel Gomes de
Resumen
Sleep and memory are two essential aspects of the life of most living beings.
During sleep, our muscles and internal organs rest, energy expenditure is reduced, our
immune system is recovered, and the metabolites produced in our brains during
wakefulness are purged; everything necessary to prepare our body for the next day of
experiences. Simultaneously, memory is a cognitive function that allows us to
characterize patterns, store them, build and develop ideas, and define who we are.
Interestingly, the last decades of research had led to the notion that these two
important physiological processes may keep holding hands, i.e., that the sleep function
on memory is not merely by cleaning unnecessary information and passively helping
by increasing the signal-to-noise ratio. The new evidence suggests a protagonism of
sleep in actively working on memory processing. Besides the plentiful evidence
implicating a specific phase of sleep called non-rapid eye movement (NREM) in
memory consolidation, the present work focuses on understanding the mechanism by
which REM sleep benefits hippocampal-dependent memory processing. We have
gone into an extensive review of the literature, designing, performing, and analyzing
experiments aiming at step forward in the understanding the role of REM sleep in the
process of making hippocampal-dependent memories persist and gradually depend
on neocortical structures (corticalization) over time. Our results indicate that there are
special time windows for REM sleep-dependent plasticity and memory corticalization
after learning, with particular attention to an early window 3 – 4h after training and a
late one about 12 h after. We show evidence of an interplay between the hippocampus
and the retrosplenial cortex (two regions closely related to memory processing) during
REM sleep, and that this interplay in the early window is correlated with memory
expression. We also exhibit evidence suggesting that the upregulation of genes related
to synaptic plasticity during the late time window, which have been consistently
implicated in memory persistence, may depend on REM sleep. Altogether, the results
reported in the present work support the notion that windows of REM sleep after
training are important for offline memory processing and corticalization. They also
suggest that the mechanisms of REM sleep action comprise the cross-talk between
memory-related cortical and subcortical regions, and to provide training-induced gene
expression necessary for the optimized remodeling of cortical networks for the
introduction of new information into preexisting knowledge.