articleScienceJun 5, 2014Closed access

Sleep promotes branch-specific formation of dendritic spines after learning

New York University · Peking University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

How sleep helps learning and memory remains unknown. We report in mouse motor cortex that sleep after motor learning promotes the formation of postsynaptic dendritic spines on a subset of branches of individual layer V pyramidal neurons. New spines are formed on different sets of dendritic branches in response to different learning tasks and are protected from being eliminated when multiple tasks are learned. Neurons activated during learning of a motor task are reactivated during subsequent non-rapid eye movement sleep, and disrupting this neuronal reactivation prevents branch-specific spine formation. These findings indicate that sleep has a key role in promoting learning-dependent synapse formation and…

Citation impact

624
total citations
FWCI
27.94
Percentile
100%
References
43
Citations per year

Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Dendritic spine
  • Sleep (system call)
  • Neuroscience
  • Perspective (graphical)
  • Task (project management)
  • Psychology
  • Biology
  • Computer science
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