Szeretettel várunk minden kedves érdeklődőt! Időpont:Kedd, máj. 18. 16hHelyszín:Pázmány P.
Kat. Egyetem - ITK (1083, Práter utca 50/a) Kari Tanácsterem (204-es szoba) Dr. Ulbert
István, PhDtudományos főmunkatárs, csoportvezetőÖsszehasonlító Pszichofiziológiai Csoport,
MTA Pszichológiai Kutatóintézethttp://www.mtapi.hu/index.php?mi=204&lang=hu Laminar
analysis of slow wave activity in humans The most distinctive features of brain electrical
activity is that it is composed of cyclic patterns with various characteristic recurrence
frequencies. These electrical brain rhythms are shown to be hierarchically organized and
take an important role in both pathological and physiological functions. One of the most
fundamental cortical electrical rhythms is the one that emerges in the deepest stage of
non rapid eye movement sleep, called the slow wave activity. It was shown in animal models
that it gives rise to a variety cyclic brain activity including delta, theta, spindle,
alpha, beta, gamma and ripple oscillations establishing itself as the common orchestrator
of brain electrical rhythms in sleep.Cortical slow wave activity is shown to enhance
epileptic manifestations, but it is also thought to underlie essential restorative
processes and facilitate the consolidation of declarative memories. Animal studies show
that slow wave activity is composed of rhythmically recurring phases of widespread,
increased cortical cellular and synaptic activity, referred to as active- or up-state,
followed by cellular and synaptic inactivation, referred as silent- or down-state.
However, its neural mechanisms in humans are poorly understood since the traditional
intracellular techniques used in animals are inappropriate for investigating the cellular
and synaptic/trans-membrane events in humans.To elucidate the intracortical neuronal
mechanisms of slow wave activity in humans, novel, laminar multichannel microelectrodes
were chronically implanted into the cortex of patients with drug resistant focal epilepsy
undergoing cortical mapping for seizure focus localization. Intracortical laminar local
field potential gradient, multiple unit and single unit activities were recorded during
slow wave sleep, related to simultaneous electrocorticography, and analyzed with current
source density and spectral methods.We found that slow wave activity in humans reflects a
rhythmic oscillation between widespread cortical activation and silence. Cortical
activation was demonstrated as increased wideband (0.3-200 Hz) spectral power including
all bands of cortical oscillations from spindle to ripple, increased multiple and single
unit activity, and powerful inward transmembrane currents, mainly localized to the
supragranular layers. Neuronal firing in the up-state was sparse and the average discharge
rate of single cells was less than expected from animal studies. Action potentials at
up-state onset were synchronized within ±10 ms across all cortical layers,
suggesting that any layer could initiate firing at up-state onset.These findings provide
strong direct experimental evidence that slow wave activity in humans is characterized by
hyperpolarizing currents associated with suppressed cell firing, alternating with high
levels of oscillatory synaptic activity associated with increased cell firing. Our results
emphasize the major involvement of supragranular layers in the genesis of slow wave
activity. Az előadás után kötetlen beszélgetésre invitáljuk Önöket kávéés süti
kíséretében!
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