
Sleep Science Podcast S2E6 Wenbiao Gan - The role of sleep in synapse formation and elimination
Sep 1, 2021
Wenbiao Gan, a neuroscience professor known for two-photon imaging of synaptic plasticity, discusses how sleep shapes dendritic spine formation and elimination. He covers imaging techniques, how learning and different sleep stages drive spine turnover, surprising findings about REM and non-REM roles, and ideas on why nightly pruning may improve learning and generalization.
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From Laser Physics To Live Imaging Of Synapses
- Wenbiao Gan switched from studying laser physics to neuroscience because he wanted to understand how the brain encodes and maintains information over a lifetime.
- He began using sparse GFP labeling and two-photon microscopy to directly image dendritic spines over hours to years in mouse cortex, enabling live observations of synapse dynamics.
Sleep Drives Synaptic Pruning During Development
- In developing mouse cortex, sleep increases dendritic spine elimination compared with wake, suggesting sleep contributes to pruning during development.
- Spine formation rates were similar with or without sleep, implying sleep specifically promotes removal rather than immediate formation in that context.
Task Specific Spine Formation After Rotarod Training
- After one-hour motor training on a rotarod, Gan observed new spines forming selectively on subsets of dendritic branches of layer 5 pyramidal neurons.
- Training on a different task (running backward) produced new spines on different branches, linking task-specific reactivation to spine formation.
