Mutual interaction between visual homeostatic plasticity and sleep in adult humans

Author:

Menicucci Danilo1ORCID,Lunghi Claudia2ORCID,Zaccaro Andrea1ORCID,Morrone Maria Concetta34ORCID,Gemignani Angelo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgical, Medical and Molecular Pathology and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pisa

2. Laboratoire des Systèmes Perceptifs, Département d'études Cognitives, École Normale Supérieure

3. Department of Translational Research and New Technologies in Medicine and Surgery, University of Pisa

4. IRCCS Fondazione Stella Maris

Abstract

Sleep and plasticity are highly interrelated, as sleep slow oscillations and sleep spindles are associated with consolidation of Hebbian-based processes. However, in adult humans, visual cortical plasticity is mainly sustained by homeostatic mechanisms, for which the role of sleep is still largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that non-REM sleep stabilizes homeostatic plasticity of ocular dominance induced in adult humans by short-term monocular deprivation: the counterintuitive and otherwise transient boost of the deprived eye was preserved at the morning awakening (>6 hr after deprivation). Subjects exhibiting a stronger boost of the deprived eye after sleep had increased sleep spindle density in frontopolar electrodes, suggesting the involvement of distributed processes. Crucially, the individual susceptibility to visual homeostatic plasticity soon after deprivation correlated with the changes in sleep slow oscillations and spindle power in occipital sites, consistent with a modulation in early occipital visual cortex.

Funder

FP7

ERC

French National Research Agency

MIUR

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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