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Serotonin and noradrenaline modulate respiratory pattern disturbances evoked by glutamate injection into the pedunculopontine tegmentum of anesthetized rats.

作者信息

Saponjic Jasna, Cvorovic Jovana, Radulovacki Miodrag, Carley David W

机构信息

Section of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine (MC 719), 840 South Wood Street, Chicago, Illinois 60612-7323, USA.

出版信息

Sleep. 2005 May;28(5):560-70. doi: 10.1093/sleep/28.5.560.

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVES

We hypothesized that 2 important neurotransmitters related to behavioral state control, serotonin and noradrenaline, could also be modulators of pedunculopontine tegmental nucleus (PPT)-induced respiratory dysrhythmia.

DESIGN

We examined the impact of serotonin and noradrenaline at respiratory control sites in the PPT functionally identified by immediate apnea of 2.5- to 10-second duration, followed by increased variability of breath time (CVT(T)) (P < .04) after locally injecting glutamate in anesthetized rats.

SETTING

Basic sleep and respiratory neurobiology laboratory.

PARTICIPANTS

Sixteen adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats.

MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS

Glutamate-induced respiratory responses, including increases of total apnea duration and CVT(T), were not different between groups of rats in which we further tested monoaminergic modulatory effects (for CVT(T) P = .98, and for total apnea duration, P = .80). Serotonin or noradrenaline injected at the same sites as glutamate had equal impact on CVT(T) (P = .34) and on mean total apnea duration (P = .80), but pretreatment of PPT sites with serotonin blocked (remained equal to preinjection; P = .11), whereas pretreatment with noradrenaline potentiated (P = .04) the increment of respiratory-timing variability induced by glutamate. The serotonergic-blocking effect on glutamate-induced respiratory dysrhythmia was specific to the PPT: the respiratory responses induced by glutamate injection outside the PPT were not modulated by serotonin (for CVT(T), P = .46, and for mean apnea duration, P = .99).

CONCLUSIONS

The opposed impact of serotonin and noradrenaline on PPT-induced respiratory dysrhythmia, in contrast to their convergent regulatory role in behavioral state control, suggests a functionally distinct role for the PPT in respiratory-pattern control independent of rapid eye movement sleep control.

摘要

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