Faculty Opinions recommendation of Interdependent feedback regulation of breathing by the carotid bodies and the retrotrapezoid nucleus.

Author(s):  
James Duffin
2017 ◽  
Vol 596 (15) ◽  
pp. 3029-3042 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrice G. Guyenet ◽  
Douglas A. Bayliss ◽  
Ruth L. Stornetta ◽  
Roy Kanbar ◽  
Yingtang Shi ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 473 (17) ◽  
pp. 2561-2572 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Mark Evans ◽  
Amira D. Mahmoud ◽  
Javier Moral-Sanz ◽  
Sandy Hartmann

Regulation of breathing is critical to our capacity to accommodate deficits in oxygen availability and demand during, for example, sleep and ascent to altitude. It is generally accepted that a fall in arterial oxygen increases afferent discharge from the carotid bodies to the brainstem and thus delivers increased ventilatory drive, which restores oxygen supply and protects against hypoventilation and apnoea. However, the precise molecular mechanisms involved remain unclear. We recently identified as critical to this process the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), which is key to the cell-autonomous regulation of metabolic homoeostasis. This observation is significant for many reasons, not least because recent studies suggest that the gene for the AMPK-α1 catalytic subunit has been subjected to natural selection in high-altitude populations. It would appear, therefore, that evolutionary pressures have led to AMPK being utilized to regulate oxygen delivery and thus energy supply to the body in the short, medium and longer term. Contrary to current consensus, however, our findings suggest that AMPK regulates ventilation at the level of the caudal brainstem, even when afferent input responses from the carotid body are normal. We therefore hypothesize that AMPK integrates local hypoxic stress at defined loci within the brainstem respiratory network with an index of peripheral hypoxic status, namely afferent chemosensory inputs. Allied to this, AMPK is critical to the control of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and thus ventilation–perfusion matching at the lungs and may also determine oxygen supply to the foetus by, for example, modulating utero-placental blood flow.


Science ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 348 (6240) ◽  
pp. 1255-1260 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. N. Kumar ◽  
A. Velic ◽  
J. Soliz ◽  
Y. Shi ◽  
K. Li ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
George Souza ◽  
Ruth Stornetta ◽  
Daniel Stornetta ◽  
Stephen Abbott ◽  
Patrice Guyenet

2008 ◽  
Vol 105 (2) ◽  
pp. 404-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrice G. Guyenet

The retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) contains 2,000 glutamatergic neurons that innervate selectively the respiratory centers of the pontomedullary region. These cells are at the ventral medullary surface in a previously identified chemosensitive region. RTN neurons are highly sensitive to acid in vitro and vigorously activated by inputs from the carotid body and from the hypothalamus in vivo. Mutations of the transcription factor Phox2b cause the congenital hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS), a disease characterized by extremely reduced chemoreflexes and the loss of breathing automaticity during sleep. RTN neurons express Phox2b and develop poorly in a mouse model of CCHS, which lacks chemoreflexes. Based on these and other data, I propose that the RTN is a critical nodal point for the homeostatic regulation of arterial Pco2 and that the nucleus operates as follows. RTN always contributes a major fraction of the tonic excitatory drive to the respiratory centers. RTN neurons derive their activity from two sources: a chemosensory drive (intrinsic chemosensitivity and inputs from the carotid bodies) and synaptic inputs from higher brain centers (non-chemosensory drive). Under anesthesia or non-rapid eye movement sleep, the chemosensory drive to RTN neurons dominates, and, under these circumstances, the excitatory input from RTN to the respiratory controller is required for breathing automaticity. During waking and exercise, RTN contributes a reduced fraction of the total excitatory drive to the respiratory controller, but this fraction remains essential for CO2 homeostasis because of its exquisite chemosensitivity. The working hypothesis could explain the breathing deficits experienced by CCHS patients.


1995 ◽  
Vol 268 (6) ◽  
pp. L941-L949 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. J. Mallios ◽  
R. Lydic ◽  
H. A. Baghdoyan

Cholinergic mechanisms are known to play a key role in the regulation of breathing, but the distribution of muscarinic receptor (mAChR) subtypes has not been localized within brain stem respiratory nuclei. This study examined the hypothesis that mAChR subtypes are heterogeneously distributed across brain stem nuclei that control breathing. With the use of in vitro receptor autoradiography, the results provide the first selective labeling and quantitative mapping of M1, M2, and M3 mAChR subtypes in cat brain stem regions known to regulate breathing. Among brain stem nuclei known to contain respiratory-related neurons, the greatest amount of mAChR binding was measured in the lateral and medial parabrachial nuclei and the lateral nucleus of the solitary tract. Fewer mAChRs were localized in nuclei comprising the ventral respiratory group (nucleus ambiguous, retrofacial nucleus) and ventral medulla (retrotrapezoid nucleus and ventrolateral medulla). The data provide an essential first step for future studies aiming to specify the regulatory role of mAChR subtypes within brain stem respiratory nuclei.


2014 ◽  
Vol 28 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Burke ◽  
Roy Kanbar ◽  
Walter Hodges ◽  
Kenneth Viar ◽  
Melissa Coates ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
pp. 3627-3637 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thiago S. Moreira ◽  
Ana C. Takakura ◽  
Eduardo Colombari ◽  
Patrice G. Guyenet

Retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) chemoreceptors are regulated by inputs from the carotid bodies (CB) and from pulmonary mechanoreceptors. Here we tested whether RTN neurons are influenced by 5-hydroxytryptamine type 3 receptor-expressing C-fiber vagal afferents. In urethan-anesthetized rats, selective activation of vagal C-fiber afferents by phenylbiguanide (PBG) eliminated the phrenic nerve discharge (PND) and inhibited RTN neurons ( n = 24). PBG had no inhibitory effect in vagotomized rats. Muscimol injection into the solitary tract nucleus, commissural part, reduced inhibition of PND and RTN by PBG (73%), blocked activation of PND and RTN by CB stimulation (cyanide) but had no effect on inhibition of PND and RTN by lung inflation. Bilateral injections of muscimol into interstitial solitary tract nucleus (NTS) reduced the inhibition of PND and RTN by PBG (53%), blocked the inhibitory effects of lung inflation but did not change the activation of PND and RTN neurons by CB stimulation. PBG and lung inflation activated postinspiratory neurons located within the rostral ventral respiratory group (rVRG) and inhibited inspiratory and expiratory neurons. Bilateral injections of muscimol into rVRG eliminated PND and partially decreased RTN neuron inhibition by PBG (32%). In conclusion, activation of cardiopulmonary C-fiber afferents inhibits the activity of RTN chemoreceptors. The pathway relays within a broad medial region of the NTS and involves the rVRG to a limited degree. The apnea triggered by activation of cardiopulmonary C-fiber afferents may be due in part to a reduction of the activity of RTN chemoreceptors.


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