Author:
Ribeiro Sidarta,Nicolelis Miguel A.L.
Abstract
In mammals and birds, long episodes of nondreaming sleep
(“slow-wave” sleep, SW) are followed by short episodes of dreaming
sleep (“rapid-eye-movement” sleep, REM). Both SW and REM sleep
have been shown to be important for the consolidation of newly acquired
memories, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here we review
electrophysiological and molecular data suggesting that SW and REM sleep play
distinct and complementary roles on memory consolidation: While
postacquisition neuronal reverberation depends mainly on SW sleep episodes,
transcriptional events able to promote long-lasting memory storage are only
triggered during ensuing REM sleep. We also discuss evidence that the
wake-sleep cycle promotes a postsynaptic propagation of memory traces away
from the neural sites responsible for initial encoding. Taken together, our
results suggest that basic molecular and cellular mechanisms underlie the
reverberation, storage, and propagation of memory traces during sleep. We
propose that these three processes alone may account for several important
properties of memory consolidation over time, such as deeper memory encoding
within the cerebral cortex, incremental learning several nights after memory
acquisition, and progressive hippocampal disengagement.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Cited by
121 articles.
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