Osaka T
Department of Nutritional Science, National Institute of Health and Nutrition, 1-23-1 Toyama, Shinjuku 162-8636, Japan.
Neuroscience. 2014 May 16;267:46-56. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.02.035. Epub 2014 Mar 5.
Hypoxia evokes a regulated decrease in the body core temperature (Tc) in a variety of animals. The neuronal mechanisms of this response include, at least in part, glutamatergic activation in the lateral preoptic area (LPO) of the hypothalamus. As the sympathetic premotor neurons in the medulla oblongata constitute a cardinal relay station in the descending neuronal pathway from the hypothalamus for thermoregulation, their inhibition can also be critically involved in the mechanisms of the hypoxia-induced hypothermia. Here, I examined the hypothesis that hypoxia-induced hypothermia is mediated by glutamate-responsive neurons in the LPO that activate GABAergic transmission in the rostral raphe pallidus (rRPa) and neighboring parapyramidal region (PPy) of the medulla oblongata in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized, neuromuscularly blocked, artificially ventilated rats. Unilateral microinjection of GABA (15nmol) into the rRPa and PPy regions elicited a prompt increase in tail skin temperature (Ts) and decreases in Tc, oxygen consumption rate (VO2), and heart rate. Next, when the GABAA receptor blocker bicuculline methiodide (bicuculline methiodide (BMI), 10pmol) alone was microinjected into the rRPa, it elicited unexpected contradictory responses: simultaneous increases in Ts, VO2 and heart rate and a decrease in Tc. Then, when BMI was microinjected bilaterally into the PPy, no direct effect on Ts was seen; and thermogenic and tachycardic responses were slight. However, pretreatment of the PPy with BMI, but not vehicle saline, greatly attenuated the hypothermic responses evoked by hypoxic (10%O2-90%N2, 5min) ventilation or bilateral microinjections of glutamate (5nmol, each side) into the LPO. The results suggest that hypoxia-induced hypothermia was mediated, at least in part, by the activation of GABAA receptors in the PPy.
缺氧会导致多种动物的体核温度(Tc)出现规律性下降。这种反应的神经机制至少部分包括下丘脑外侧视前区(LPO)的谷氨酸能激活。由于延髓中的交感运动前神经元是下丘脑下行神经通路中体温调节的主要中继站,它们的抑制也可能在缺氧诱导的体温过低机制中起关键作用。在此,我研究了以下假设:在乌拉坦 - 氯醛糖麻醉、神经肌肉阻断、人工通气的大鼠中,缺氧诱导的体温过低是由LPO中的谷氨酸反应性神经元介导的,这些神经元激活延髓头端中缝苍白核(rRPa)和邻近的锥体旁区域(PPy)中的GABA能传递。将GABA(15nmol)单侧微量注射到rRPa和PPy区域会导致尾皮温度(Ts)迅速升高,同时Tc、耗氧率(VO₂)和心率降低。接下来,当单独将GABAA受体阻断剂甲碘化荷包牡丹碱(BMI,10pmol)微量注射到rRPa时,引发了意想不到的矛盾反应:Ts、VO₂和心率同时增加,而Tc降低。然后,当将BMI双侧微量注射到PPy时,未观察到对Ts的直接影响;产热和心动过速反应轻微。然而,用BMI预处理PPy,而不是用生理盐水预处理,可大大减弱由缺氧(10%O₂ - 90%N₂,5分钟)通气或双侧向LPO微量注射谷氨酸(5nmol,每侧)引起的体温过低反应。结果表明,缺氧诱导的体温过低至少部分是由PPy中GABAA受体的激活介导的。