Fictive Gill and Lung Ventilation in the Pre- and Postmetamorphic Tadpole Brain Stem

1998 ◽  
Vol 80 (4) ◽  
pp. 2015-2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. S. Torgerson ◽  
M. J. Gdovin ◽  
J. E. Remmers

Torgerson, C. S., M. J. Gdovin, and J. E. Remmers. Fictive gill and lung ventilation in the pre- and postmetamorphic tadpole brain stem. J. Neurophysiol. 80: 2015–2022, 1998. The pattern of efferent neural activity recorded from the isolated brain stem preparation of the tadpole Rana catesbeiana was examined to characterize fictive gill and lung ventilations during ontogeny. In vitro recordings from cranial nerve (CN) roots V, VII, and X and spinal nerve (SN) root II of premetamorphic tadpoles showed a coordinated sequence of rhythmic bursts occurring in one of two patterns, pattern1, high-frequency, low-amplitude bursts lacking corresponding activity in SN II and pattern 2, low-frequency, high-amplitude bursts with coincident bursts in SN II. These two patterns corresponded to gill and lung ventilatory burst patterns, respectively, recorded from nerve roots of decerebrate, spontaneously breathing tadpoles. Similar patterns were observed in brain stem preparations from postmetamorphic tadpoles except that they showed a greater frequency of lung bursts and they expressed fictive gill ventilation in SN II. The laryngeal branch of the vagus (Xl) displayed efferent bursts in phase with gill and lung activity, suggesting fictive glottal constriction during gill ventilation and glottal dilation during lung ventilation. The fictive gill ventilatory cycle of pre- and postmetamorphic tadpoles was characterized by a rostral to caudal sequence of CN bursts. The fictive lung ventilatory pattern in the premetamorphic animal was initiated by augmenting CN VII discharge followed by synchronous bursts in CN V, X, SN II, and Xl. By contrast, postmetamorphic patterns of fictive lung ventilation were characterized by lung burst activity in SN II that preceded burst onset in CN V and followed the lead burst in CN VII. We conclude that recruitment and timing of pattern 1 and pattern 2 rhythmic bursts recorded in vitro closely resemble that recorded during spontaneous respiratory behavior, indicating that the two patterns are the neural equivalent of gill and lung ventilation, respectively. Further, fictive gill and lung ventilatory patterns in postmetamorphic tadpoles differ in burst onset latency from premetamorphic tadpole patterns and resemble fictive oropharyngeal and pulmonary burst cycles in adult frogs.

1997 ◽  
Vol 200 (15) ◽  
pp. 2063-2072 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Torgerson ◽  
M Gdovin ◽  
J Remmers

An isolated brainstem preparation of the bullfrog tadpole, Rana catesbeiana, displays coordinated rhythmic bursting activities in cranial nerves V, VII and X in vitro. In decerebrate, spontaneously breathing tadpoles, we have previously shown that these bursts correspond to fluctuations in buccal and lung pressures and to bursts of activity in the buccal levator muscle H3a. This demonstrates that the rhythmic bursting activities recorded in vitro represent fictive gill and lung ventilation. To investigate the ontogeny of central respiratory chemoreception during the transition from gill to lung ventilation, we superfused the isolated brainstems of four larval stage groups with oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid at various levels of PCO2. We measured shifts in the pattern of fictive respiratory output and the response to central hypercapnic stimulation throughout development. At normal PCO2 (2.3 kPa), stage 3­9 tadpoles displayed rhythmic neural bursts associated with gill ventilation, while stages 10­14 and 15­19 tadpoles produced oscillating bursting activity associated with both gill and lung respiration, and tadpoles at stages 20­25 displayed neural activity predominantly associated with lung ventilation. In stage 3­9 tadpoles, variations in PCO2 of the superfusate (0.5­6.0 kPa) caused almost no change in fictive gill or lung ventilation. By contrast, stage 10­14 tadpoles showed a significant hypercapnic response (P<0.05) in the amplitude and frequency of fictive gill ventilation, which was accompanied by a significant increase (P<0.05) in the burst amplitude and respiratory output of cranial nerve X over that occurring at all other stages. The amplitude and frequency of fictive gill ventilation in stages 15­19 increased significantly (P<0.05) in response to pH reduction, but became insensitive to hypercapnia at stages 20­25. The frequency of fictive lung ventilation was unresponsive to hypercapnia in stage 10­14, increased significantly by stage 15­19 (P<0.05) and became maximal (P<0.05) in stages 20­25. Overall, we describe the ontological development of central respiratory chemoreceptors driving respiratory output in the larval amphibian, demonstrating transfer in central chemoreceptive influence from gill to lung regulation during metamorphic stages. In addition, we provide novel evidence for the stimulatory influence of central chemoreceptors on fictive gill ventilation in response to CO2.


2001 ◽  
Vol 280 (4) ◽  
pp. R913-R920 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. S. Torgerson ◽  
M. J. Gdovin ◽  
J. E. Remmers

During ontogeny, amphibian larvae experience a dramatic alteration in the motor act of breathing as the premetamorphic gill breather develops into the postmetamorphic lung ventilator. We tested the hypothesis that the site of lung rhythmogenesis relocates during metamorphosis by recording fictive lung ventilation before and after transecting the in vitro brain stem of pre- and postmetamorphic Rana catesbeiana into four segments. In premetamorphic tadpoles, the two caudalmost brain stem segments combined proved to be the minimum brain stem configuration necessary and sufficient for lung burst generation. In the postmetamorphic counterpart, this function was supplied by the combination of the two rostralmost brain stem segments. In the postmetamorphic brain stem, a 500-μm segment lying just rostral to cranial nerve IX conveys rhythmogenic capability to neighboring rostral or caudal segments. We conclude that lung rhythmogenic capability translocates rostrally during development as the tadpole shifts from gill to lung ventilation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 280 (4) ◽  
pp. R921-R928 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. S. Torgerson ◽  
M. J. Gdovin ◽  
R. Brandt ◽  
J. E. Remmers

The location of central respiratory chemoreceptors in amphibian larvae may change as the central chemoreceptive function shifts from driving gill to driving lung ventilation during metamorphosis. We examined this possibility in the in vitro brain stem of the pre- and postmetamorphic Rana catesbeiana tadpole by microinjecting hypercapnic artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) while recording fictive lung ventilation. The rostral and caudal brain stem were separately explored systematically using injections of 11 nl of aCSF equilibrated with 100% CO2 that transiently acidified a 500-μm region, producing a maximum reduction in pH of 0.23 ± 0.06 at the site of injection. In postmetamorphic tadpoles, chemoreceptive sites were concentrated in the rostral compared with the caudal brain stem. No such segregation was observed in the premetamorphic tadpole. We conclude that, as in lung rhythmogenic function, respiratory chemosensitivity emerges rostrally in the amphibian brain stem during development.


2002 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 936-946 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Kinkead ◽  
Olivier Belzile ◽  
Roumiana Gulemetova

To test the hypothesis that serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT)-receptor activation elicits age-dependent changes in respiratory motor output, we compared the effects of 5-HT bath application (5-HT concentration = 0.5–25 μM) onto in vitro brain stem preparations from pre- and postmetamorphic bullfrog tadpoles. Recording of motor output related to gill and lung ventilation showed that 5-HT elicits a dose-dependent depression of gill burst frequency in both groups. In contrast, the lung burst frequency response was stage dependent; an increase in lung burst frequency at low 5-HT concentration (≤0.5 μM) was observed only in the postmetamorphic group. Higher 5-HT concentrations decreased lung burst frequency in all preparations. Gill burst frequency attenuation is mediated (at least in part) by 5-HT1A-receptor activation in an age-dependent fashion. We conclude that serotonergic modulation of respiratory motor output 1) changes during tadpole development and 2) is distinct for gill and lung ventilation.


2003 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
pp. 1204-1212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara E. Taylor ◽  
Michael B. Harris ◽  
E. Lee Coates ◽  
Matthew J. Gdovin ◽  
J. C. Leiter

Central CO2 chemoreception and the role of carbonic anhydrase were assessed in brain stems from Rana catesbeiana tadpoles and frogs. Buccal and lung rhythms were recorded from cranial nerve VII and spinal nerve II during normocapnia and hypercapnia before and after treatment with 25 μM acetazolamide. The lung response to acetazolamide mimicked the hypercapnic response in early-stage and midstage metamorphic tadpoles and frogs. In late-stage tadpoles, acetazolamide actually inhibited hypercapnic responses. Acetazolamide and hypercapnia decreased the buccal frequency but had no effect on the buccal duty cycle. Carbonic anhydrase activity was present in the brain stem in every developmental stage. Thus more frequent lung ventilation and concomitantly less frequent buccal ventilation comprised the hypercapnic response, but the response to acetazolamide was not consistent during metamorphosis. Therefore, acetazolamide is not a useful tool for central CO2 chemoreceptor studies in this species. The reversal of the effect of acetazolamide in late-stage metamorphosis may reflect reorganization of central chemosensory processes during the final transition from aquatic to aerial respiration.


2003 ◽  
Vol 284 (2) ◽  
pp. R405-R412 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael S. Hedrick ◽  
Rachel E. Winmill

This study examined the direct effects of tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222), a sodium-channel blocking local anesthetic, on respiratory motor output using an in vitro brain stem preparation of adult North American bullfrogs ( Rana catesbeiana). Bullfrogs were anesthetized with halothane, and the brain stem was removed and superfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid containing MS-222 at concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 1,000 μM. At the lowest concentration of MS-222, respiratory frequency ( f R) increased significantly ( P < 0.05), but at higher concentrations, f R progressively decreased and was abolished in all preparations at 1,000 μM ( P < 0.01). Respiratory burst amplitude and burst duration were not affected by MS-222. The frequency of nonrespiratory neural activity did not significantly change with the addition of MS-222 below 1,000 μM. These data indicate that MS-222 has a significant, direct effect on respiratory motor output from the central nervous system, producing both excitation and inhibition of fictive breathing. The results are consistent with other studies demonstrating that low concentrations of anesthetics generally cause excitation followed by depression at higher concentrations. Although the mechanisms underlying the excitatory effects of MS-222 in this study are unclear, they may include increased excitatory neurotransmission and/or disinhibition of inputs to the respiratory central pattern generator.


2019 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-40
Author(s):  
Frederick R. Prete ◽  
Aaron E. Schirmer ◽  
Salim Patel ◽  
Christina Carrion ◽  
Greg M. Prete ◽  
...  

We analyzed the rhythmic, cyclical dorsal-ventral abdominal pumping movements of nymphal and adult Hierodula patellifera (Audinet- Serville 1839), and adult Stagmomantis carolina (Johansson 1763), Tenodera sinensis (de Saussure 1871), Miomantis paykullii (Stål 1871), and Sphodromantis lineola (Burmeister 1838) using a combination of customized video analysis software and frame-by-frame video analyses. Despite the phylogenetic and ecological diversity of these species, we found fundamental similarities in the overall, intermittent patterns of their abdominal pumping movements. In adults of all species, intermittent bouts of abdominal pumping had median durations of 64-89 sec, and were separated by intervals with median durations of 10-25 sec. Bouts began with rhythmic upward abdominal deflections of progressively increasing amplitude and frequency which were superimposed on an overall, progressive abdominal elevation. Bouts ended with 1-4 very high amplitude, low frequency upward deflections after which the abdomen returned to its horizontal (resting) position. In H. patellifera, the overall adult pattern emerged gradually during larval development. Given the diversity of the species tested, our data suggest that intermittent abdominal pumping (which has been associated with respiratory behavior in insects) may be independent of ecological niche or acute environmental stressors in mantises. Instead, our data support the hypothesis that these apparently respiratory related, intermittent abdominal pumping movements are an emergent property of the mantis central nervous system organization.


2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 1489-1497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel A. Castro-Alamancos ◽  
Maria E. Calcagnotto

The thalamus is the principal relay station of sensory information to the neocortex. In return, the neocortex sends a massive feedback projection back to the thalamus. The thalamus also receives neuromodulatory inputs from the brain stem reticular formation, which is vigorously activated during arousal. We investigated the effects of two neuromodulators, acetylcholine and norepinephrine, on corticothalamic responses in vitro and in vivo. Results from rodent slices in vitro showed that acetylcholine and norepinephrine depress the efficacy of corticothalamic synapses while enhancing their frequency-dependent facilitation. This produces a stronger depression of low-frequency responses than of high-frequency responses. The effects of acetylcholine and norepinephrine were mimicked by muscarinic and α2-adrenergic receptor agonists and blocked by muscarinic and α-adrenergic antagonists, respectively. Stimulation of the brain stem reticular formation in vivo also strongly depressed corticothalamic responses. The suppression was very strong for low-frequency responses, which do not produce synaptic facilitation, but absent for high-frequency corticothalamic responses. As in vitro, application of muscarinic and α-adrenergic antagonists into the thalamus in vivo abolished the suppression of corticothalamic responses induced by stimulating the reticular formation. In conclusion, cholinergic and noradrenergic activation during arousal high-pass filters corticothalamic activity. Thus, during arousal only high-frequency inputs from the neocortex are allowed to reach the thalamus. Neuromodulators acting on corticothalamic synapses gate the flow of cortical activity to the thalamus as dictated by behavioral state.


2002 ◽  
Vol 205 (8) ◽  
pp. 1161-1169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lise Broch ◽  
Rey D. Morales ◽  
Anthony V. Sandoval ◽  
Michael S. Hedrick

SUMMARYIsolated brainstem preparations from larval (tadpole) and adult Rana catesbeiana were used to examine inhibitory mechanisms for developmental regulation of the respiratory central pattern generator (CPG). Preparations were superfused at 20-22 °C with Cl--free artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) or with aCSF containing agonists/antagonists ofγ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) or glycine receptors. Respiratory motor output from the CPG, measured as neural activity from cranial nerve roots, was associated with fictive gill ventilation and lung ventilation in tadpoles and with fictive lung ventilation in adults. In tadpoles, fictive lung burst frequency was 0.8±0.2 min-1 and did not change significantly with Cl--free aCSF superfusion; however, lung burst amplitude increased by nearly 400 % (P&lt;0.01). Fictive gill ventilation averaged 41.6±3.3 min-1 and was reversibly abolished by Cl--free aCSF. Superfusion with Cl--free aCSF abolished lung bursts in two of seven adult preparations, and overall lung burst frequency decreased from 3.1±0.7 to 0.4±0.03 min-1(P&lt;0.01), but burst amplitude was unchanged. Low concentrations of GABA (0.5 mmol l-1) produced a significant increase in lung burst frequency followed by almost complete inhibition at 5.0 mmol l-1,accompanied by the abolition of gill ventilation at 2.5-5.0 mmol l-1. By contrast, fictive lung ventilation in adults was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by glycine and GABA, and inhibition occurred at approximately 10-fold lower concentrations compared with tadpoles. The glycine receptor antagonist strychnine (2.5-25.0 μmol l-1) and the GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline (1-10 μmol l-1)inhibited fictive gill ventilation and increased fictive lung ventilation in tadpoles. However, bicuculline and strychnine inhibited fictive lung ventilation in adults. These results suggest that lung ventilation in the tadpole brainstem may be driven by a pacemaker-like mechanism since Cl--free aCSF failed to abolish lung ventilation. Lung ventilation in adults and gill ventilation in tadpoles, however, appear to be dependent upon conventional Cl--mediated synaptic inhibition. Thus, there may be a developmental change in the fundamental process driving lung ventilation in amphibians. We hypothesize that maturation of the bullfrog respiratory CPG reflects developmental changes in glycinergic and/or GABAergic synaptic inhibitory mechanisms.


2003 ◽  
Vol 285 (6) ◽  
pp. R1461-R1472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara E. Taylor ◽  
Michael B. Harris ◽  
J. C. Leiter ◽  
Matthew J. Gdovin

Sites of central CO2 chemosensitivity were investigated in isolated brain stems from Rana catesbeiana tadpoles and frogs. Respiratory neurograms were made from cranial nerve (CN) 7 and spinal nerve 2. Superfusion of the brain stem with hypercapnic artificial cerebrospinal fluid elicited increased fictive lung ventilation. The effect of focal perfusion of hypercapnic artificial cerebrospinal fluid on discrete areas of the ventral medulla was assessed. Sites of chemosensitivity, which are active continuously throughout development, were identified adjacent to CN 5 and CN 10 on the ventral surface of the medulla. In early- and middle-stage tadpoles and frogs, unilateral stimulation within either site was sufficient to elicit the hypercapnic response, but simultaneous stimulation within both sites was required in late-stage tadpoles. The chemosensitive sites were individually disrupted by unilateral application of 1 mg/ml protease, and the sensitivity to bath application or focal perfusion of hypercapnia was reassessed. Protease lesions at CN 10 abolished the entire hypercapnic response, but lesions at CN 5 affected only the hypercapnic response originating from the CN 5 site. Neurons within the chemosensitive sites were also destroyed by unilateral application of 1 mM kainic acid, and the sensitivity to bath or focal application of hypercapnia was reassessed. Kainic acid lesions within either site abolished the hypercapnic response. Using a vital dye, we determined that kainic acid destroyed neurons by only within 100 μm of the ventral medullary surface. Thus, regardless of developmental stage, neurons necessary for CO2 sensitivity are located in the ventral medulla adjacent to CN 5 and 10.


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