Macquarie Medical School, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human SciencesMacquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
J Neurophysiol. 2024 Nov 1;132(5):1496-1506. doi: 10.1152/jn.00295.2024. Epub 2024 Oct 2.
In the rat, the activity of laryngeal adductor muscles, the crural diaphragm, and sympathetic vasomotor neurons is entrained to the postinspiratory (post-I) phase of the respiratory cycle, a mechanism thought to enhance cardiorespiratory efficiency. The identity of the central neurons responsible for transmitting respiratory activity to these outputs remains unresolved. Here we explore the contribution of the Kölliker-Fuse/parabrachial nuclei (KF-PBN) in the generation of post-I activity in vagal and sympathetic outputs under steady-state conditions and during acute hypoxemia, a condition that potently recruits post-I activity. In artificially ventilated, vagotomized, and urethane-anesthetized rats, bilateral KF-PBN inhibition by microinjection of the GABA receptor agonist isoguvacine evoked stereotypical responses on respiratory pattern, characterized by a reduction in phrenic nerve burst amplitude, a modest lengthening of inspiratory time, and an increase in breath-to-breath variability, while post-I vagal nerve activity was abolished and post-I sympathetic nerve activity diminished. During acute hypoxemia, KF-PBN inhibition attenuated tachypneic responses and completely abolished post-I vagal activity while preserving respiratory-sympathetic coupling. Furthermore, KF-PBN inhibition disrupted the decline in respiratory frequency that normally follows resumption of oxygenation. These findings suggest that the KF-PBN is a critical hub for the distribution of post-I activities to vagal and sympathetic outputs and is an important contributor to the dynamic adjustments to respiratory patterns that occur in response to acute hypoxia. Although KF-PBN appears essential for post-I vagal activity, it only partially contributes to post-I sympathetic nerve activity, suggesting the contribution of multiple neural pathways to respiratory-sympathetic coupling. Inhibition of neurons in the pontine Kölliker-Fuse/parabrachial complex (KF-PBN) differentially inhibited postinspiratory (post-I) activity in vagal and sympathetic outputs. The strong recruitment of post-I vagal activity that occurs in response to hypoxemia is selectively abolished by KF-PBN inhibition. This suggests that ) post-I activity in vagal and sympathetic outputs may be generated by partially independent mechanisms and ) neurons in the KF-PBN are a preeminent source of drive for the generation of eupneic post-I activity.
在大鼠中,喉内收肌、膈脚和交感血管运动神经元的活动被纳入呼吸周期的吸气后(post-I)相,这一机制被认为可以提高心肺效率。负责将呼吸活动传递到这些输出的中枢神经元的身份仍未解决。在这里,我们探索了 Kölliker-Fuse/parabrachial 核(KF-PBN)在稳态条件下和急性低氧血症期间向迷走神经和交感神经输出传递 post-I 活动的贡献,急性低氧血症强烈募集 post-I 活动。在人工通气、迷走神经切断和氨基甲酸乙酯麻醉的大鼠中,双侧 KF-PBN 抑制通过注射 GABA 受体激动剂异古瓦西汀诱发呼吸模式的刻板反应,表现为膈神经爆发幅度降低、吸气时间适度延长和呼吸间变异性增加,同时迷走神经活动被消除,交感神经活动减少。在急性低氧血症期间,KF-PBN 抑制减弱了呼吸急促反应并完全消除了 post-I 迷走神经活动,同时保留了呼吸-交感神经耦合。此外,KF-PBN 抑制破坏了正常情况下随着氧合恢复而出现的呼吸频率下降。这些发现表明,KF-PBN 是将 post-I 活动分配到迷走神经和交感神经输出的关键枢纽,是对急性低氧血症反应中呼吸模式动态调整的重要贡献者。尽管 KF-PBN 似乎对 post-I 迷走神经活动至关重要,但它仅部分贡献于 post-I 交感神经活动,这表明多个神经通路对呼吸-交感神经耦合的贡献。抑制脑桥 Kölliker-Fuse/parabrachial 复合体(KF-PBN)中的神经元以不同的方式抑制迷走神经和交感神经输出中的 post-I 活动。对低氧血症的强烈募集 post-I 迷走神经活动被 KF-PBN 抑制选择性消除。这表明:)迷走神经和交感神经输出中的 post-I 活动可能由部分独立的机制产生;)KF-PBN 中的神经元是产生 eupneic post-I 活动的卓越驱动源。