Gumnit Maia G, Watters Jyoti J, Baker Tracy L, Johnson Sarah M, Johnson Stephen M
Department of Comparative Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States.
Front Physiol. 2022 Jul 22;13:921466. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2022.921466. eCollection 2022.
Endogenous opioid peptides activating mu-opioid receptors (MORs) are part of an intricate neuromodulatory system that coordinates and optimizes respiratory motor output to maintain blood-gas homeostasis. MOR activation is typically associated with respiratory depression but also has excitatory effects on breathing and respiratory neurons. We hypothesized that low level MOR activation induces excitatory effects on the respiratory motor pattern. Thus, low concentrations of an MOR agonist drug (DAMGO, 10-200 nM) were bath-applied to neonatal rat brainstem-spinal cord preparations while recording inspiratory-related motor output on cervical spinal roots (C4-C5). Bath-applied DAMGO (50-200 nM) increased inspiratory motor burst amplitude by 40-60% during (and shortly following) drug application with decreased burst frequency and minute activity. Reciprocal changes in inspiratory burst amplitude and frequency were balanced such that 20 min after DAMGO (50-200 nM) application, minute activity was unaltered compared to pre-DAMGO levels. The DAMGO-induced inspiratory burst amplitude increase did not require crossed cervical spinal pathways, was expressed on thoracic ventral spinal roots (T4-T8) and remained unaltered by riluzole pretreatment (blocks persistent sodium currents associated with gasping). Split-bath experiments showed that the inspiratory burst amplitude increase was induced only when DAMGO was bath-applied to the brainstem and not the spinal cord. Thus, MOR activation in neonates induces a respiratory burst amplitude increase brainstem-specific mechanisms. The burst amplitude increase counteracts the expected MOR-dependent frequency depression and may represent a new mechanism by which MOR activation influences respiratory motor output.
激活μ-阿片受体(MORs)的内源性阿片肽是一个复杂的神经调节系统的一部分,该系统协调并优化呼吸运动输出以维持血气平衡。MOR激活通常与呼吸抑制有关,但对呼吸和呼吸神经元也有兴奋作用。我们假设低水平的MOR激活会对呼吸运动模式产生兴奋作用。因此,在记录颈脊髓神经根(C4-C5)上与吸气相关的运动输出时,将低浓度的MOR激动剂药物(DAMGO,10-200 nM)浴用于新生大鼠脑干-脊髓标本。浴用DAMGO(50-200 nM)在药物应用期间(及之后不久)使吸气运动爆发幅度增加40-60%,同时爆发频率和每分钟活动减少。吸气爆发幅度和频率的反向变化是平衡的,因此在应用DAMGO(50-200 nM)20分钟后,与应用DAMGO前的水平相比,每分钟活动未改变。DAMGO诱导的吸气爆发幅度增加不需要交叉的颈脊髓通路,在胸段腹侧脊髓神经根(T4-T8)上表现出来,并且不受利鲁唑预处理(阻断与喘息相关的持续性钠电流)的影响。分浴实验表明,只有当DAMGO浴用于脑干而不是脊髓时,才会诱导吸气爆发幅度增加。因此,新生儿中的MOR激活通过脑干特异性机制诱导呼吸爆发幅度增加。爆发幅度的增加抵消了预期的MOR依赖性频率降低,可能代表了MOR激活影响呼吸运动输出的一种新机制。