respiratory network
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolaus Bueschke ◽  
Lara do Amaral‐Silva ◽  
Min Hu ◽  
Joseph M. Santin

2021 ◽  
pp. JN-RM-1329-21
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Burgraff ◽  
Nicholas E. Bush ◽  
Jan-Marino Ramirez ◽  
Nathan A. Baertsch

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reno Roberts ◽  
Mark Wall ◽  
Ingke Braren ◽  
Karendheep Dhillion ◽  
Amy Evans ◽  
...  

Abstract Sleep apnoea is a highly prevalent disease but often goes undetected and is associated with poor clinical prognoses when combined with many different disease states. However, most animal models of sleep apnoea (e.g., intermittent hypoxia) have recently been dispelled as physiologically unrealistic. Due to a lack of appropriate models, little is known about the causative link between sleep apnoea and it’s co-morbidities. To overcome these problems, we have created a realistic animal model of moderate sleep apnoea by reducing the excitability of the respiratory network. This has been achieved through controlled genetically-mediated lesions to the preBötzinger Complex (preBötC), the inspiratory oscillator. This novel model shows increases in sleep disordered breathing with alterations in breathing during wakefulness (decreased frequency and increased tidal volume) as observed clinically. The increase in apnoea episodes leads to a reduction in REM sleep, with all lost active sleep being spent in an awake state. The increase in hypoxic and hypercapnia insults leads to both systemic and neural inflammation. Alterations in neurophysiology, an inhibition of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), reflect deficits in both long and short term spatial memory. This new physiologically relevant and clinically realistic model of sleep apnoea may be the key to understanding why sleep apnoea has such far reaching and often fatal effects on end organ function.


Author(s):  
Donatella Mutolo ◽  
Fulvia Bongianni ◽  
Tito Pantaleo ◽  
Elenia Cinelli

2021 ◽  
pp. 113813
Author(s):  
Jean-Philippe Rousseau ◽  
Luana Tenorio-Lopes ◽  
Sergio Cortez Ghio ◽  
Pascale Desjardins ◽  
Stéphanie Fournier ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas Burgraff ◽  
Nathan Baertsch ◽  
Nicholas Bush ◽  
Jan‐Marino Ramirez

2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gjinovefa Kola ◽  
Cara Campanaro ◽  
Caitlyn Clifford ◽  
David Nethery ◽  
Thomas Dick ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 1757 ◽  
pp. 147255
Author(s):  
Pedro Trevizan-Baú ◽  
Werner I. Furuya ◽  
Stuart B. Mazzone ◽  
Davor Stanić ◽  
Rishi R. Dhingra ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (10) ◽  
pp. e2020922118
Author(s):  
Seonghan Jang ◽  
Peter Mergaert ◽  
Tsubasa Ohbayashi ◽  
Kota Ishigami ◽  
Shuji Shigenobu ◽  
...  

Most animals harbor a gut microbiota that consists of potentially pathogenic, commensal, and mutualistic microorganisms. Dual oxidase (Duox) is a well described enzyme involved in gut mucosal immunity by the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that antagonizes pathogenic bacteria and maintains gut homeostasis in insects. However, despite its nonspecific harmful activity on microorganisms, little is known about the role of Duox in the maintenance of mutualistic gut symbionts. Here we show that, in the bean bug Riptortus pedestris, Duox-dependent ROS did not directly contribute to epithelial immunity in the midgut in response to its mutualistic gut symbiont, Burkholderia insecticola. Instead, we found that the expression of Duox is tracheae-specific and its down-regulation by RNAi results in the loss of dityrosine cross-links in the tracheal protein matrix and a collapse of the respiratory system. We further demonstrated that the establishment of symbiosis is a strong oxygen sink triggering the formation of an extensive network of tracheae enveloping the midgut symbiotic organ as well as other organs, and that tracheal breakdown by Duox RNAi provokes a disruption of the gut symbiosis. Down-regulation of the hypoxia-responsive transcription factor Sima or the regulators of tracheae formation Trachealess and Branchless produces similar phenotypes. Thus, in addition to known roles in immunity and in the formation of dityrosine networks in diverse extracellular matrices, Duox is also a crucial enzyme for tracheal integrity, which is crucial to sustain mutualistic symbionts and gut homeostasis. We expect that this is a conserved function in insects.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 2019
Author(s):  
Swen Hülsmann ◽  
Liya Hagos ◽  
Volker Eulenburg ◽  
Johannes Hirrlinger

The role of inhibitory neurons in the respiratory network is a matter of ongoing debate. Conflicting and contradicting results are manifold and the question whether inhibitory neurons are essential for the generation of the respiratory rhythm as such is controversial. Inhibitory neurons are required in pulmonary reflexes for adapting the activity of the central respiratory network to the status of the lung and it is hypothesized that glycinergic neurons mediate the inspiratory off-switch. Over the years, optogenetic tools have been developed that allow for cell-specific activation of subsets of neurons in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we aimed to identify the effect of activation of inhibitory neurons in vivo. Here, we used a conditional transgenic mouse line that expresses Channelrhodopsin 2 in inhibitory neurons. A 200 µm multimode optical fiber ferrule was implanted in adult mice using stereotaxic surgery, allowing us to stimulate inhibitory, respiratory neurons within the core excitatory network in the preBötzinger complex of the ventrolateral medulla. We show that, in anesthetized mice, activation of inhibitory neurons by blue light (470 nm) continuously or with stimulation frequencies above 10 Hz results in a significant reduction of the respiratory rate, in some cases leading to complete cessation of breathing. However, a lower stimulation frequency (4–5 Hz) could induce a significant increase in the respiratory rate. This phenomenon can be explained by the resetting of the respiratory cycle, since stimulation during inspiration shortened the associated breath and thereby increased the respiratory rate, while stimulation during the expiratory interval reduced the respiratory rate. Taken together, these results support the concept that activation of inhibitory neurons mediates phase-switching by inhibiting excitatory rhythmogenic neurons in the preBötzinger complex.


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