Yamanaka Ko, Waki Hidefumi
Department of Physiology, Graduate School of Health and Sports Science, Juntendo University, Inzai, Japan.
Institute of Health and Sports Science and Medicine, Juntendo University, Inzai, Japan.
Front Physiol. 2022 Jun 1;13:820112. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2022.820112. eCollection 2022.
Humans and animals can determine whether a situation is favorable to them and act accordingly. For this, the autonomic tuning of the cardiovascular system to supply energy to active skeletal muscles through the circulatory system is as important as motor control. However, how the autonomic cardiovascular responses are regulated in dynamically changing environments and the neuronal mechanisms underlying these responses remain unclear. To resolve these issues, we recorded the blood pressure and heart rate of head-restrained rats during dynamically changing appetitive and aversive classical conditioning tasks. The rats displayed various associations between conditioned stimuli and unconditioned stimuli in appetitive (sucrose water), neutral (no outcome), and aversive (air puff) blocks. The blood pressure and heart rate in the appetitive block gradually increased in response to the reward-predicting cue and the response to the actual reward vigorously increased. The reward-predictive response was significantly higher than the responses obtained in the neutral and aversive condition blocks. To investigate whether the reward-predictive pressor response was caused by orofacial movements such as anticipatory licking behavior, we separately analyzed high- and low-licking trials. The conditioned pressor response was observed even in trials with low-licking behaviors. Blood pressure and heart rate responses to the air puff-predicting cue in the aversive block were not significantly different from the responses in the neutral block. The conditioned blood pressure response rapidly changed with condition block switching. Furthermore, to examine the contribution of the amygdala as an emotion center to these conditioned responses, we bilaterally microinjected a GABA receptor agonist, muscimol, into the central nucleus of the amygdala. Pharmacological inactivation of the central nucleus of the amygdala significantly decreased the reward-predictive pressor responses. These results suggest that the blood pressure is adaptively and rapidly regulated by emotional conditioned stimuli and that the central nucleus of the amygdala participates in regulating the pressor response in dynamically changing situations.
人类和动物能够判断一种情况是否对自己有利,并据此采取行动。为此,心血管系统通过循环系统向活跃的骨骼肌供应能量的自主调节与运动控制同样重要。然而,在动态变化的环境中自主心血管反应是如何调节的,以及这些反应背后的神经机制仍不清楚。为了解决这些问题,我们在动态变化的食欲性和厌恶性经典条件反射任务中记录了头部固定大鼠的血压和心率。在食欲性(蔗糖水)、中性(无结果)和厌恶性(吹气)阶段,大鼠表现出条件刺激和非条件刺激之间的各种关联。在食欲性阶段,血压和心率随着奖励预测线索逐渐升高,对实际奖励的反应剧烈增加。奖励预测反应明显高于在中性和厌恶性条件阶段获得的反应。为了研究奖励预测性升压反应是否由口面部运动如预期舔舐行为引起,我们分别分析了高舔舐和低舔舐试验。即使在低舔舐行为的试验中也观察到了条件性升压反应。在厌恶性阶段,对吹气预测线索的血压和心率反应与中性阶段的反应没有显著差异。条件性血压反应随着阶段转换而迅速变化。此外,为了检查杏仁核作为情绪中心对这些条件反应的贡献,我们将GABA受体激动剂蝇蕈醇双侧微量注射到杏仁核中央核。杏仁核中央核的药理学失活显著降低了奖励预测性升压反应。这些结果表明,血压受情绪条件刺激的适应性快速调节,杏仁核中央核参与在动态变化情况下调节升压反应。