Abstract

Discharge patterns of 63 neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) were cross-correlated with inspiratory onsets of the respiratory cycle and the R wave of the cardiac cycle in seven unrestrained, drug-free cats during waking (AW), quiet sleep (QS) and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. BNST neurons fired slowly, with half having rates of less than 1/second; rates were higher in AW and REM states than in QS. Approximately one-quarter of cells showed a phasic discharge timing relationship with the respiratory cycle, and one-fifth with the cardiac cycle, in at least one sleep-waking state. Respiratory-cell correlations occurred more frequently during AW (18 cells) and QS (15) than REM (6), while cardiac-neuronal correlations preferentially developed during QS (13 cells) or REM sleep (11), with a smaller proportion during waking (7). Cardiac-cell discharge correlations were weaker than respiratory-cell correlations and much weaker during REM than during either AW or QS. The data suggest that sleep states modulate a respiratory-dependent neuronal discharge in this rostral site classically associated with affective functions, with the relationship being reduced during REM.

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