Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky.
Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2014 Sep 15;307(6):R711-20. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00138.2014. Epub 2014 Jul 2.
Pathologies in which insulin is dysregulated, including diabetes, can disrupt central vagal circuitry, leading to gastrointestinal and other autonomic dysfunction. Insulin affects whole body metabolism through central mechanisms and is transported into the brain stem dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus (DMV) and nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS), which mediate parasympathetic visceral regulation. The NTS receives viscerosensory vagal input and projects heavily to the DMV, which supplies parasympathetic vagal motor output. Normally, insulin inhibits synaptic excitation of DMV neurons, with no effect on synaptic inhibition. Modulation of synaptic inhibition in DMV, however, is often sensitive to cAMP-dependent mechanisms. We hypothesized that an effect of insulin on GABAergic synaptic transmission may be uncovered by elevating resting cAMP levels in GABAergic terminals. We used whole cell patch-clamp recordings in brain stem slices from control and diabetic mice to identify insulin effects on inhibitory neurotransmission in the DMV in the presence of forskolin to elevate cAMP levels. In the presence of forskolin, insulin decreased the frequency of inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) and the paired-pulse ratio of evoked IPSCs in DMV neurons from control mice. This effect was blocked by brefeldin-A, a Golgi-disrupting agent, or indinavir, a GLUT4 blocker, indicating that protein trafficking and glucose transport were involved. In streptozotocin-treated, diabetic mice, insulin did not affect IPSCs in DMV neurons in the presence of forskolin. Results suggest an impairment of cAMP-induced insulin effects on GABA release in the DMV, which likely involves disrupted protein trafficking in diabetic mice. These findings provide insight into mechanisms underlying vagal dysregulation associated with diabetes.
胰岛素失调相关的病理学,包括糖尿病,可破坏迷走神经中枢回路,导致胃肠道和其他自主神经功能障碍。胰岛素通过中枢机制影响全身代谢,被运送到脑干迷走神经背核(DMV)和孤束核(NTS),从而介导副交感内脏调节。NTS 接收内脏感觉传入的迷走神经输入,并大量投射到 DMV,DMV 提供副交感迷走神经运动输出。正常情况下,胰岛素抑制 DMV 神经元的突触兴奋,但对突触抑制没有影响。然而,DMV 中突触抑制的调节通常对 cAMP 依赖性机制敏感。我们假设,通过提高 GABA 能末梢的 cAMP 水平,可以揭示胰岛素对 GABA 能突触传递的影响。我们使用来自对照和糖尿病小鼠的脑干切片的全细胞膜片钳记录,以鉴定在 forskolin存在下升高 cAMP 水平时胰岛素对 DMV 中抑制性神经传递的影响。在 forskolin 的存在下,胰岛素降低了对照小鼠 DMV 神经元抑制性突触后电流(IPSCs)的频率和诱发 IPSC 的成对脉冲比。该作用被布雷非德菌素 A(一种破坏高尔基体的试剂)或 indinavir(一种 GLUT4 阻断剂)阻断,表明蛋白运输和葡萄糖转运参与其中。在链脲佐菌素处理的糖尿病小鼠中,胰岛素在 forskolin 存在下不影响 DMV 神经元中的 IPSC。结果表明,cAMP 诱导的胰岛素对 DMV 中 GABA 释放的作用受损,这可能涉及糖尿病小鼠中蛋白运输的破坏。这些发现为与糖尿病相关的迷走神经失调的潜在机制提供了深入了解。