Pamenter Matthew E, Carr J Austin, Go Ariel, Fu Zhenxing, Reid Stephen G, Powell Frank L
Division of Physiology, Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093-0623, USA.
J Physiol. 2014 Apr 15;592(8):1839-56. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.268706. Epub 2014 Feb 3.
When exposed to a hypoxic environment the body's first response is a reflex increase in ventilation, termed the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR). With chronic sustained hypoxia (CSH), such as during acclimatization to high altitude, an additional time-dependent increase in ventilation occurs, which increases the HVR. This secondary increase persists after exposure to CSH and involves plasticity within the circuits in the central nervous system that control breathing. Currently these mechanisms of HVR plasticity are unknown and we hypothesized that they involve glutamatergic synapses in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), where afferent endings from arterial chemoreceptors terminate. To test this, we treated rats held in normoxia (CON) or 10% O2 (CSH) for 7 days and measured ventilation in conscious, unrestrained animals before and after microinjecting glutamate receptor agonists and antagonists into the NTS. In normoxia, AMPA increased ventilation 25% and 50% in CON and CSH, respectively, while NMDA doubled ventilation in both groups (P < 0.05). Specific AMPA and NMDA receptor antagonists (NBQX and MK801, respectively) abolished these effects. MK801 significantly decreased the HVR in CON rats, and completely blocked the acute HVR in CSH rats but had no effect on ventilation in normoxia. NBQX decreased ventilation whenever it was increased relative to normoxic controls; i.e. acute hypoxia in CON and CSH, and normoxia in CSH. These results support our hypothesis that glutamate receptors in the NTS contribute to plasticity in the HVR with CSH. The mechanism underlying this synaptic plasticity is probably glutamate receptor modification, as in CSH rats the expression of phosphorylated NR1 and GluR1 proteins in the NTS increased 35% and 70%, respectively, relative to that in CON rats.
当暴露于低氧环境时,机体的第一反应是通气反射性增加,称为低氧通气反应(HVR)。在慢性持续性低氧(CSH)状态下,如在高原适应过程中,通气会出现额外的时间依赖性增加,从而增强HVR。这种继发性增加在暴露于CSH后持续存在,并且涉及控制呼吸的中枢神经系统回路内的可塑性。目前,HVR可塑性的这些机制尚不清楚,我们推测它们涉及孤束核(NTS)中的谷氨酸能突触,动脉化学感受器的传入末梢在此终止。为了验证这一点,我们将大鼠置于常氧(CON)或10%氧气(CSH)环境中7天,在向NTS微量注射谷氨酸受体激动剂和拮抗剂前后,测量清醒、不受束缚动物的通气情况。在常氧条件下,AMPA分别使CON组和CSH组的通气增加25%和50%,而NMDA使两组的通气增加一倍(P<0.05)。特异性AMPA和NMDA受体拮抗剂(分别为NBQX和MK801)消除了这些效应。MK801显著降低了CON组大鼠的HVR,并完全阻断了CSH组大鼠的急性HVR,但对常氧通气无影响。相对于常氧对照,只要通气增加,NBQX就会降低通气;即CON组和CSH组的急性低氧以及CSH组的常氧情况。这些结果支持了我们的假设,即NTS中的谷氨酸受体有助于CSH时HVR的可塑性。这种突触可塑性的潜在机制可能是谷氨酸受体修饰,因为与CON组大鼠相比,CSH组大鼠NTS中磷酸化NR1和GluR1蛋白的表达分别增加了35%和70%。