Serotonergic regulation of cortical neurovascular coupling and hemodynamics upon awakening from sleep in mice

Author:

Natsubori Akiyo1ORCID,Kwon Soojin1,Honda Yoshiko1,Kojima Takashi1,Karashima Akihiro2,Masamoto Kazuto3ORCID,Honda Makoto1

Affiliation:

1. Sleep Disorders Project, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo, Japan

2. Department of Electronics, Graduate School of Engineering, Tohoku Institute of Technology, Sendai, Japan

3. Dept. Mechanical and Intelligent Systems Engineering, Univ. of Electro-Communications, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Neurovascular coupling (NVC) is the functional hyperemia of the brain responding to local neuronal activity. It is mediated by astrocytes and affected by subcortical ascending pathways in the cortex that convey information, such as sensory stimuli and the animal condition. Here, we investigate the influence of the raphe serotonergic system, a subcortical ascending arousal system in animals, on the modulation of cortical NVC and cerebral blood flow (CBF). Raphe serotonergic neurons were optogenically activated for 30 s, which immediately awakened the mice from non-rapid eye movement sleep. This caused a biphasic cortical hemodynamic change: a transient increase for a few seconds immediately after photostimulation onset, followed by a large progressive decrease during the stimulation period. Serotonergic neuron activation increased intracellular Ca2+ levels in cortical pyramidal neurons and astrocytes, demonstrating its effect on the NVC components. Pharmacological inhibition of cortical neuronal firing activity and astrocyte metabolic activity had small hypovolemic effects on serotonin-induced biphasic CBF changes, while blocking 5-HT1B receptors expressed primarily in cerebral vasculature attenuated the decreasing CBF phase. This suggests that serotonergic neuron activation leading to animal awakening could allow the NVC to exert a hyperemic function during a biphasic CBF response, with a predominant decrease in the cortex.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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