Evidence that glutamate is the transmitter mediating respiratory drive from medullary premotor neurons to phrenic motoneurons: A double labeling study in the rat

1990 ◽  
Vol 115 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 177-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Makoto Saji ◽  
Mitsuhiko Miura
1989 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 1297-1303 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Iscoe

The role of phrenic afferents in controlling inspiratory duration (TI) at elevated end-expiratory lung volume (EEV) has been studied in pentobarbital-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing cats with intact vagi. Responses to increases in EEV, induced by imposition of an expiratory threshold load (ETL) of 10 cmH2O, were monitored before and after section of cervical dorsal roots C3-C7. The immediate (first-breath) effect of application of ETL was a prolongation of both TI and expiratory duration (TE). After 10 min of breathing against the ETL, average TI returned to control values but TE remained prolonged. Abolishing feedback from the diaphragm did not affect these responses. When steady-state responses to ETL were compared with those elicited by inhalation of 5–6% CO2 in O2, changes in EEV had, on average, no independent effect on respiratory drive (rate of rise of integrated phrenic activity), although phrenic activity increased greatly in some cats despite little or no change in arterial partial pressure of CO2. These data indicate that diaphragmatic receptors do not contribute to either the immediate (first-breath) or steady-state responses of phrenic motoneurons to increases in EEV in intact cats.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 3497-3508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Martin-Caraballo ◽  
John J. Greer

Prior to the inception of inspiratory synaptic drive transmission from medullary respiratory centers, rat phrenic motoneurons (PMNs) have action potential and repetitive firing characteristics typical of immature embryonic motoneurons. During the period spanning from when respiratory bulbospinal and segmental afferent synaptic connections are formed at embryonic day 17 ( E17) through to birth (gestational period is ∼21 days), a pronounced transformation of PMN electrophysiological properties occurs. In this study, we test the hypothesis that the elaboration of action potential afterpotentials and the resulting changes in repetitive firing properties are due in large part to developmental changes in PMN potassium conductances. Ionic conductances were measured via whole cell patch recordings using a cervical slice-phrenic nerve preparation isolated from perinatal rats. Voltage- and current-clamp recordings revealed that PMNs expressed outward rectifier ( I KV) and A-type potassium currents that regulated PMN action potential and repetitive firing properties throughout the perinatal period. There was an age-dependent leftward shift in the activation voltage and a decrease in the time-to-peak of I KV during the period from E16 through to birth. The most dramatic change during the perinatal period was the increase in calcium-activated potassium currents after the inception of inspiratory drive transmission at E17. Block of the maxi-type calcium-dependent potassium conductance caused a significant increase in action potential duration and a suppression of the fast afterhyperpolarizing potential. Block of the small conductance calcium-dependent potassium channels resulted in a marked suppression of the medium afterhyperpolarizing potential and an increase in the repetitive firing frequency. In conclusion, the increase in calcium-mediated potassium conductances are in large part responsible for the marked transformation in action potential shape and firing properties of PMNs from the time between the inception of fetal respiratory drive transmission and birth.


2011 ◽  
Vol 105 (5) ◽  
pp. 2330-2336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amber Rice ◽  
Andrew J. Fuglevand ◽  
Christopher M. Laine ◽  
Ralph F. Fregosi

The respiratory central pattern generator distributes rhythmic excitatory input to phrenic, intercostal, and hypoglossal premotor neurons. The degree to which this input shapes motor neuron activity can vary across respiratory muscles and motor neuron pools. We evaluated the extent to which respiratory drive synchronizes the activation of motor unit pairs in tongue (genioglossus, hyoglossus) and chest-wall (diaphragm, external intercostals) muscles using coherence analysis. This is a frequency domain technique, which characterizes the frequency and relative strength of neural inputs that are common to each of the recorded motor units. We also examined coherence across the two tongue muscles, as our previous work shows that, despite being antagonists, they are strongly coactivated during the inspiratory phase, suggesting that excitatory input from the premotor neurons is distributed broadly throughout the hypoglossal motoneuron pool. All motor unit pairs showed highly correlated activity in the low-frequency range (1–8 Hz), reflecting the fundamental respiratory frequency and its harmonics. Coherence of motor unit pairs recorded either within or across the tongue muscles was similar, consistent with broadly distributed premotor input to the hypoglossal motoneuron pool. Interestingly, motor units from diaphragm and external intercostal muscles showed significantly higher coherence across the 10–20-Hz bandwidth than tongue-muscle units. We propose that the lower coherence in tongue-muscle motor units over this range reflects a larger constellation of presynaptic inputs, which collectively lead to a reduction in the coherence between hypoglossal motoneurons in this frequency band. This, in turn, may reflect the relative simplicity of the respiratory drive to the diaphragm and intercostal muscles, compared with the greater diversity of functions fulfilled by muscles of the tongue.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Anne Kastner ◽  
Valéry Matarazzo

High cervical spinal cord injuries interrupt the bulbospinal respiratory pathways projecting to the cervical phrenic motoneurons resulting in important respiratory defects. In the case of a lateralized injury that maintains the respiratory drive on the opposite side, a partial recovery of the ipsilateral respiratory function occurs spontaneously over time, as observed in animal models. The rodent respiratory system is therefore a relevant model to investigate the neuroplastic and neuroprotective mechanisms that will trigger such phrenic motoneurons reactivation by supraspinal pathways. Since part of this recovery is dependent on the damaged side of the spinal cord, the present review highlights our current understanding of the anatomical neuroplasticity processes that are developed by the surviving damaged bulbospinal neurons, notably axonal sprouting and rerouting. Such anatomical neuroplasticity relies also on coordinated molecular mechanisms at the level of the axotomized bulbospinal neurons that will promote both neuroprotection and axon growth.


1988 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey C. Smith ◽  
Guosong Liu ◽  
Jack L. Feldman

1990 ◽  
Vol 259 (2) ◽  
pp. R282-R287 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Sato ◽  
H. Saito ◽  
K. Seto ◽  
H. Takatsuji

We studied the mechanisms of occurrences of apneas and bradyarrhythmias during sleep in five Wistar-Kyoto rats. We recorded electroencephalograms, electrocardiograms, chest wall movement, and diaphragmatic electromyograms (EMGdi) for three continuous days in each freely moving rat and demonstrated that: 1) 99% of the apneas and 99% of the bradyarrhythmias occurred during paradoxical sleep (PS), 2) 98% of the apneas were due to spontaneous cessations of respiratory drive, 3) the percentages among apneas accompanied with bradyarrhythmias were only about 30% and independent of the apneic durations, 4) every autoregressive power spectrum contained two significant components in the ranges of 50-80 and 110-140 Hz, which would be analogous to high-frequency oscillations postulated to originate in the synaptic input to the phrenic motoneurons from respiratory centers, and 5) spectral patterns of EMGdi signals varied with sleep states. These results suggest that "PS-related" neural activity modulating central respiratory output is important in inducing apneas and promoting bradyarrhythmias.


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