Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle

Summary: Motor tics, the hallmark of Tourette syndrome (TS), are modulated by different behavioral and environmental factors. A major modulating factor is the sleep-wake cycle in which tics are attenuated to a large extent during sleep. This study demonstrates a similar reduction in tic expression d...

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Main Authors: Esther Vinner Harduf, Ayala Matzner, Katya Belelovsky, Izhar Bar-Gad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-04-01
Series:iScience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004221003485
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spelling doaj-7b0daa835b3f43af8a6fbb460d8927842021-04-26T05:58:07ZengElsevieriScience2589-00422021-04-01244102380Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycleEsther Vinner Harduf0Ayala Matzner1Katya Belelovsky2Izhar Bar-Gad3The Leslie & Susan Goldschmied (Gonda) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, IsraelThe Leslie & Susan Goldschmied (Gonda) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, IsraelThe Leslie & Susan Goldschmied (Gonda) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, IsraelThe Leslie & Susan Goldschmied (Gonda) Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, Israel; Corresponding author:Summary: Motor tics, the hallmark of Tourette syndrome (TS), are modulated by different behavioral and environmental factors. A major modulating factor is the sleep-wake cycle in which tics are attenuated to a large extent during sleep. This study demonstrates a similar reduction in tic expression during sleep in an animal model of chronic tic disorders and investigates the underlying neural mechanism. We recorded the neuronal activity during spontaneous sleep-wake cycles throughout continuous GABAA antagonist infusion into the striatum. Analysis of video streams and concurrent kinematic assessments indicated tic reduction during sleep in both frequency and intensity. Extracellular recordings in the striatum revealed a state-dependent dissociation between motor tic expression and their macro-level neural correlates (“LFP spikes”) during the sleep-wake cycle. Local field potential (LFP) spikes, which are highly correlated with tic expression during wakefulness, persisted during tic-free sleep and did not change their properties despite the reduced behavioral expression. Local, micro-level, activity near the infusion site was time-locked to the LFP spikes during wakefulness, but this locking decreased significantly during sleep. These results suggest that whereas LFP spikes encode motor tic generation and feasibility, the behavioral expression of tics requires local striatal neural activity entrained to the LFP spikes, leading to the propagation of the activity to downstream targets and consequently their motor expression. These findings point to a possible mechanism for the modulation of tic expression in patients with TS during sleep and potentially during other behavioral states.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004221003485Behavioral NeuroscienceNeuroscience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esther Vinner Harduf
Ayala Matzner
Katya Belelovsky
Izhar Bar-Gad
spellingShingle Esther Vinner Harduf
Ayala Matzner
Katya Belelovsky
Izhar Bar-Gad
Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
iScience
Behavioral Neuroscience
Neuroscience
author_facet Esther Vinner Harduf
Ayala Matzner
Katya Belelovsky
Izhar Bar-Gad
author_sort Esther Vinner Harduf
title Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
title_short Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
title_full Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
title_fullStr Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
title_full_unstemmed Dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
title_sort dissociation of tic generation from tic expression during the sleep-wake cycle
publisher Elsevier
series iScience
issn 2589-0042
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Summary: Motor tics, the hallmark of Tourette syndrome (TS), are modulated by different behavioral and environmental factors. A major modulating factor is the sleep-wake cycle in which tics are attenuated to a large extent during sleep. This study demonstrates a similar reduction in tic expression during sleep in an animal model of chronic tic disorders and investigates the underlying neural mechanism. We recorded the neuronal activity during spontaneous sleep-wake cycles throughout continuous GABAA antagonist infusion into the striatum. Analysis of video streams and concurrent kinematic assessments indicated tic reduction during sleep in both frequency and intensity. Extracellular recordings in the striatum revealed a state-dependent dissociation between motor tic expression and their macro-level neural correlates (“LFP spikes”) during the sleep-wake cycle. Local field potential (LFP) spikes, which are highly correlated with tic expression during wakefulness, persisted during tic-free sleep and did not change their properties despite the reduced behavioral expression. Local, micro-level, activity near the infusion site was time-locked to the LFP spikes during wakefulness, but this locking decreased significantly during sleep. These results suggest that whereas LFP spikes encode motor tic generation and feasibility, the behavioral expression of tics requires local striatal neural activity entrained to the LFP spikes, leading to the propagation of the activity to downstream targets and consequently their motor expression. These findings point to a possible mechanism for the modulation of tic expression in patients with TS during sleep and potentially during other behavioral states.
topic Behavioral Neuroscience
Neuroscience
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589004221003485
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AT katyabelelovsky dissociationofticgenerationfromticexpressionduringthesleepwakecycle
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