Detection of mRNA species in bulbospinal neurons isolated from the rostral ventrolateral medulla using single-cell RT–PCR

1999 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 367-377 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison M Comer ◽  
Hannah M Gibbons ◽  
Jianguo Qi ◽  
Yoshinori Kawai ◽  
Joe Win ◽  
...  
2001 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 379-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilio Mazza ◽  
Smita Thakkar-Varia ◽  
Carol A. Tozzi ◽  
Judith A. Neubauer

Recently, unique regions in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) have been found to be oxygen sensitive. However, the mechanism of sensing oxygen in these RVLM regions is unknown. Because heme oxygenase (HO) has been shown to be involved in the hypoxic responses of the carotid body and pulmonary artery, the aim of this study was to determine whether HO is present in the RVLM and whether expression of HO is altered by chronic hypoxia. Adult rats were exposed to hypoxia (10% O2) or normoxia (21% O2) for 10 days, and the mRNA for HO-1 and HO-2 was examined in the RVLM by using RT-PCR. Expression of HO-2 mRNA was seen in the RVLM of both control and hypoxic samples, whereas expression of HO-1 mRNA was only seen in the RVLM of hypoxic samples. HO-2 was immunocytochemically localized in brain sections (40 μm) to the C1 region and pre-Bötzinger complex of the RVLM. Together, these results indicate that HO-2 is present in the RVLM under control conditions and that HO-1 is induced in the RVLM during chronic hypoxia, consistent with a potential role for HO in the oxygen-sensing function of these cardiorespiratory RVLM regions.


2008 ◽  
Vol 295 (5) ◽  
pp. L858-L865 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Kwong ◽  
Marian Kollarik ◽  
Christina Nassenstein ◽  
Fei Ru ◽  
Bradley J. Undem

The lungs and esophagus are innervated by sensory neurons with somata in the nodose, jugular, and dorsal root ganglion. These sensory ganglia are derived from embryonic placode (nodose) and neural crest tissues (jugular and dorsal root ganglia; DRG). We addressed the hypothesis that the neuron's embryonic origin (e.g., placode vs. neural crest) plays a greater role in determining particular aspects of its phenotype than the environment in which it innervates (e.g., lungs vs. esophagus). This hypothesis was tested using a combination of extracellular and patch-clamp electrophysiology and single-cell RT-PCR from guinea pig neurons. Nodose, but not jugular C-fibers innervating the lungs and esophagus, responded to α,β-methylene ATP with action potential discharge that was sensitive to the P2X3 (P2X2/3) selective receptor antagonist A-317491. The somata of lung- and esophagus-specific sensory fibers were identified using retrograde tracing with a fluorescent dye. Esophageal- and lung-traced neurons from placodal tissue (nodose neurons) responded similarly to α,β-methylene ATP (30 μM) with a large sustained inward current, whereas in neurons derived from neural crest tissue (jugular and DRG neurons), the same dose of α,β-methylene ATP resulted in only a transient rapidly inactivating current or no detectable current. It has been shown previously that only activation of P2X2/3 heteromeric receptors produce sustained currents, whereas homomeric P2X3 receptor activation produces a rapidly inactivating current. Consistent with this, single-cell RT-PCR analysis revealed that the nodose ganglion neurons innervating the lungs and esophagus expressed mRNA for P2X2 and P2X3 subunits, whereas the vast majority of jugular and dorsal root ganglia innervating these tissues expressed only P2X3 mRNA with little to no P2X2 mRNA expression. We conclude that the responsiveness of C-fibers innervating the lungs and esophagus to ATP and other purinergic agonists is determined more by their embryonic origin than by the environment of the tissue they ultimately innervate.


Author(s):  
Qi-Jian Sun ◽  
Jane Minson ◽  
Ida J. Llewellyn-Smith ◽  
Leonard Arnolda ◽  
John Chalmers ◽  
...  

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