A common hub for sleep and motor control in the substantia nigra

Danqian Liu(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Weifu Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chenyan Ma(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Wenxi Zheng(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Yuanyuan Yao(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Chak Foon Tso(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Peng Zhong(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Xi Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jun Song(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Woochul Choi(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Se‐Bum Paik(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Hua Han(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yang Dan(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Science
January 23, 2020
Cited by 148

Abstract

The arousal state of the brain covaries with the motor state of the animal. How these state changes are coordinated remains unclear. We discovered that sleep-wake brain states and motor behaviors are coregulated by shared neurons in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr). Analysis of mouse home-cage behavior identified four states with different levels of brain arousal and motor activity: locomotion, nonlocomotor movement, quiet wakefulness, and sleep; transitions occurred not randomly but primarily between neighboring states. The glutamic acid decarboxylase 2 but not the parvalbumin subset of SNr γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-releasing (GABAergic) neurons was preferentially active in states of low motor activity and arousal. Their activation or inactivation biased the direction of natural behavioral transitions and promoted or suppressed sleep, respectively. These GABAergic neurons integrate wide-ranging inputs and innervate multiple arousal-promoting and motor-control circuits through extensive collateral projections.


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