Segers L S, Shannon R, Lindsey B G
J Neurophysiol. 1985 Aug;54(2):318-34. doi: 10.1152/jn.1985.54.2.318.
Lesioning studies have demonstrated that the respiratory rhythm is generated within the brain stem and that connections between the pons and the medulla must be intact for the generation of eupneic breathing in the decerebrate or anesthetized vagotomized cat. However, the nature of proposed functional connections between pontine and medullary respiratory neurons is not well understood. The possibility of interactions between respiratory neurons of the rostral pons (n. parabrachialis medialis, Kölliker-Fuse nucleus) and the ipsilateral ventral respiratory group (VRG; n. retroambigualis, n. ambiguus, retrofacial nucleus) was investigated because of neuroanatomical and electrophysiological evidence for such connections. Phrenic nerve activity and pontine and medullary single-unit respiratory related activities were recorded extracellularly in 44 decerebrate, vagotomized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated cats. Cross-correlation analysis was employed to detect and evaluate functional associations of pairs of cells. Eighteen (7%) of the 255 pairs of respiratory neurons analyzed showed evidence of short time scale correlations indicative of a functional interaction. The interpretations of the detected correlations suggest that some cell pairs were correlated due to mono- or paucisynaptic connections, while others were correlated due to the influence of an unobserved shared input. The interpretations for 11 of the 15 cell pairs for which a monosynaptic connection may be postulated involve a projection from a tonically active respiratory neuron. Twelve of the 18 positive correlations involved neurons whose maximum rates of discharge occurred during different parts of the respiratory cycle. The results of this study provide the first evidence of functional connections among pontine and medullary respiratory neurons based on the evaluation of simultaneously recorded spike trains and suggest that the role of the rostral pontine respiratory neurons in the control of the respiratory rhythm may be mediated by various types of interactions. When considered with the results of other studies, our data suggest that monosynaptic interactions between VRG and rostral pontine respiratory neurons play a limited role in the control of the respiratory cycle in the decerebrate vagotomized cat. It is likely that the influence of the pons on ventral medullary neurons (and vice-versa) is also exerted via polysynaptic pathways and/or via brain stem neurons not sampled in this study.
损伤研究表明,呼吸节律是在脑干内产生的,并且脑桥和延髓之间的连接必须完整,才能在去大脑或麻醉切断迷走神经的猫中产生正常呼吸。然而,脑桥和延髓呼吸神经元之间假定的功能连接的性质尚未得到很好的理解。由于有神经解剖学和电生理学证据表明存在这种连接,因此研究了脑桥嘴侧(内侧臂旁核、 Kölliker-Fuse核)与同侧腹侧呼吸组(VRG;疑后核、疑核、面神经后核)的呼吸神经元之间相互作用的可能性。在44只去大脑、切断迷走神经、麻痹并进行人工通气的猫中,细胞外记录膈神经活动以及脑桥和延髓的单单位呼吸相关活动。采用互相关分析来检测和评估细胞对之间的功能关联。在分析的255对呼吸神经元中,有18对(7%)显示出短时间尺度相关性的证据,表明存在功能相互作用。对检测到的相关性的解释表明,一些细胞对由于单突触或寡突触连接而相关,而其他细胞对则由于未观察到的共享输入的影响而相关。在15对可能存在单突触连接的细胞对中,有11对的解释涉及来自紧张性活动的呼吸神经元的投射。18个正相关中有12个涉及在呼吸周期不同部分放电率最高的神经元。这项研究的结果基于对同时记录的尖峰序列的评估,首次证明了脑桥和延髓呼吸神经元之间的功能连接,并表明脑桥嘴侧呼吸神经元在呼吸节律控制中的作用可能是由各种类型的相互作用介导的。结合其他研究的结果来看,我们的数据表明,VRG和脑桥嘴侧呼吸神经元之间的单突触相互作用在去大脑切断迷走神经的猫的呼吸周期控制中作用有限。脑桥对延髓腹侧神经元(反之亦然)的影响可能也通过多突触途径和/或通过本研究中未采样的脑干神经元来发挥。