Temporal drift of sleep-wake representations in hypothalamic neuronal ensembles
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Correlative and causal evidence implicate distinct genetically-defined and evolutionary-conserved hypothalamic neurons in regulating wakefulness, non-rapid eye movement (NREM), and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. The prevailing view is that these circuits govern sleep-wake states by recruiting stable, invariant neuronal substrates, yet, this remains unknown. Here, we showed that inhibitory, excitatory, hypocretins/orexins-, and melanin concentrating hormone-expressing-neurons in hypothalamus did not exhibit stable state-specific activities using longitudinal single cell calcium imaging in freely-moving sleeping mice. Instead, their activity patterns shift across sleep-wake states over time, while the distribution of active neurons in each sleep state remained stable. While sleep deprivation minimally affected the selectivity of these activity patterns, we found that the sleep-promoting drug diazepam recruited NREM sleep-active cells that were previously inactive or wake-active. These findings indicate that while individual neurons exhibit dynamic, state-dependent shifts of their activity, the overall organization of sleep-wake neural populations remains stable.