• Neuroscience · Mar 2019

    Thalamo-Cortical White Matter Underlies Motor Memory Consolidation via Modulation of Sleep Spindles in Young and Older Adults.

    • Catherine Vien, Arnaud Boré, Arnaud Boutin, Basile Pinsard, Julie Carrier, Julien Doyon, and Stuart Fogel.
    • Functional Neuroimaging Unit, CRIUGM, Montreal, QC, Canada; University of Montreal, Montreal, Canada.
    • Neuroscience. 2019 Mar 15; 402: 104-115.

    AbstractAmple evidence suggests that consolidation of the memory trace associated with a newly acquired motor sequence is supported by thalamo-cortical spindle activity during subsequent sleep, as well as functional changes in a distributed cortico-striatal network. To date, however, no studies have investigated whether the structural white matter connections between these regions affect motor sequence memory consolidation in relation with sleep spindles. Here, we used diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) tractography to reconstruct the major fascicles of the cortico-striato-pallido-thalamo-cortical loop in both young and older participants who were trained on an explicit finger sequence learning task before and after a daytime nap. Thereby, this allowed us to examine whether post-learning sleep spindles measured using polysomnographic recordings interact with consolidation processes and this specific neural network. Our findings provide evidence corroborating the critical role of NREM2 thalamo-cortical sleep spindles in motor sequence memory consolidation, and show that the post-learning changes in these neurophysiological events relate specifically to white matter characteristics in thalamo-cortical fascicles. Moreover, we demonstrate that microstructure along this fascicle relates indirectly to offline gains in performance through an increase of spindle density over motor-related cortical areas. These results suggest that the integrity of thalamo-cortical projections, via their impact on sleep spindle generation, may represent one of the critical mechanisms modulating the expression of sleep-dependent offline gains following motor sequence learning in healthy adults.Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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