Hippocampo-supramammillary coupling across sleep and wake

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Hippocampal communication with subcortical circuits reorganizes across sleep-wake states, yet the dynamics of such interactions remain incompletely defined. We simultaneously recorded neuronal spiking and local field potentials from the dorsal hippocampus (CA1 and dentate gyrus) and limbic subcortical nuclei (supramammillary nucleus (SuM) and lateral septum (LS)) in freely behaving rats across the sleep-wake cycle. During quiescent states (non-rapid eye movement (nREM) sleep and quiet wakefulness), sharp-wave ripples dominated hippocampal activity and produced fast, top-down excitation, with large population surges locally in CA1 and DG, and more modest but significant activation in LS and SuM, whereas dentate spikes elicited smaller state-invariant responses. Conversely, in the bottom-up direction, epochs of high-discharge SuM activity were associated with slower, state-dependent activation of hippocampal populations that was larger in wake than in sleep, revealing distinct temporal scales and state dependence for reciprocal pathways. During activated, theta-enriched states (rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and active wakefulness), spike-field coupling revealed circuit-wide theta coordination. In active wakefulness, SuM bursts produced brief inhibition of CA1 spiking while theta oscillations organized a multiregional firing sequence around the theta cycle trough; yet SuM neurons were not significantly phase-locked. In REM sleep, this pattern inverted, with only SuM neurons significantly phase-locking to theta waves, and preferred firing near the theta cycle peak. Together, these findings identify state-dependent, bidirectional coordination between hippocampus and subcortical nuclei, characterized by ripple-locked top-down hippocampal output during quiescent states and SuM-mediated bottom-up modulation that reconfigures under theta during activated states.

Article activity feed