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1.
Acta Physiol (Oxf) ; 214(1): 8-32, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25753944

ABSTRACT

Located in the midline anterior wall of the third cerebral ventricle (i.e. the lamina terminalis), the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) receives a unique set of afferent neural inputs from fore-, mid- and hindbrain. These afferent connections enable it to receive neural signals related to several important aspects of homeostasis. Included in these afferent projections are (i) neural inputs from two adjacent circumventricular organs, the subfornical organ and organum vasculosum laminae terminalis, that respond to hypertonicity, circulating angiotensin II or other humoural factors, (ii) signals from cutaneous warm and cold receptors that are relayed to MnPO, respectively, via different subnuclei in the lateral parabrachial nucleus and (iii) input from the medulla associated with baroreceptor and vagal afferents. These afferent signals reach appropriate neurones within the MnPO that enable relevant neural outputs, both excitatory and inhibitory, to be activated or inhibited. The efferent neural pathways that proceed from the MnPO terminate on (i) neuroendocrine cells in the hypothalamic supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei to regulate vasopressin release, while polysynaptic pathways from MnPO to cortical sites may drive thirst and water intake, (ii) thermoregulatory pathways to the dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus and medullary raphé to regulate shivering, brown adipose tissue and skin vasoconstriction, (iii) parvocellular neurones in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus that drive autonomic pathways influencing cardiovascular function. As well, (iv) other efferent pathways from the MnPO to sites in the ventrolateral pre-optic nucleus, perifornical region of the lateral hypothalamic area and midbrain influence sleep mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Body Fluids/physiology , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Cardiovascular Physiological Phenomena , Homeostasis/physiology , Preoptic Area/physiology , Sleep/physiology , Sodium/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Preoptic Area/metabolism
2.
J Physiol ; 592(7): 1677-86, 2014 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24421357

ABSTRACT

We investigated a neural reflex that controls the strength of inflammatory responses to immune challenge - the inflammatory reflex. In anaesthetized rats challenged with intravenous lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 60 µg kg(-1)), we found strong increases in plasma levels of the key inflammatory mediator tumour necrosis factor α (TNFα) 90 min later. Those levels were unaffected by previous bilateral cervical vagotomy, but were enhanced approximately 5-fold if the greater splanchnic sympathetic nerves had been cut. Sham surgery had no effect, and plasma corticosterone levels were unaffected by nerve sections, so could not explain this result. Electrophysiological recordings demonstrated that efferent neural activity in the splanchnic nerve and its splenic branch was strongly increased by LPS treatment. Splenic nerve activity was dependent on inputs from the splanchnic nerves: vagotomy had no effect on the activity in either nerve. Together, these data demonstrate that immune challenge with this dose of LPS activates a neural reflex that is powerful enough to cause an 80% suppression of the acute systemic inflammatory response. The efferent arm of this reflex is in the splanchnic sympathetic nerves, not the vagi as previously proposed. As with other physiological responses to immune challenge, the afferent pathway is presumptively humoral: the present data show that vagal afferents play no measurable part. Because inflammation sits at the gateway to immune responses, this reflex could play an important role in immune function as well as inflammatory diseases.


Subject(s)
Inflammation/prevention & control , Reflex , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology , Vagus Nerve/physiopathology , Animals , Biomarkers/blood , Disease Models, Animal , Inflammation/blood , Inflammation/chemically induced , Inflammation/immunology , Inflammation/physiopathology , Inflammation Mediators/blood , Lipopolysaccharides , Male , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Splanchnic Nerves/physiopathology , Sympathetic Nervous System/surgery , Time Factors , Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/blood , Vagotomy , Vagus Nerve/surgery
3.
Auton Neurosci ; 182: 65-9, 2014 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24411268

ABSTRACT

From a critical review of the evidence on the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway and its mode of action, the following conclusions were reached. (1) Both local and systemic inflammation may be suppressed by electrical stimulation of the peripheral cut end of either vagus. (2) The spleen mediates most of the systemic inflammatory response (measured by TNF-α production) to systemic endotoxin and is also the site where that response is suppressed by vagal stimulation. (3) The anti-inflammatory effect of vagal stimulation depends on the presence of noradrenaline-containing nerve terminals in the spleen. (4) There is no disynaptic connection from the vagus to the spleen via the splenic sympathetic nerve: vagal stimulation does not drive action potentials in the splenic nerve. (5) Acetylcholine-synthesizing T lymphocytes provide an essential non-neural link in the anti-inflammatory pathway from vagus to spleen. (6) Alpha-7 subunit-containing nicotinic receptors are essential for the vagal anti-inflammatory action: their critical location is uncertain, but is suggested here to be on splenic sympathetic nerve terminals. (7) The vagal anti-inflammatory pathway can be activated electrically or pharmacologically, but it is not the efferent arm of the inflammatory reflex response to endotoxemia.


Subject(s)
Cholinergic Neurons/physiology , Inflammation/physiopathology , Neural Pathways/physiopathology , Neuroimmunomodulation/physiology , Vagus Nerve/physiopathology , Animals , Humans , Spleen/innervation
4.
Exp Physiol ; 97(11): 1180-5, 2012 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22247284

ABSTRACT

The 'inflammatory reflex' acts through efferent neural connections from the central nervous system to lymphoid organs, particularly the spleen, that suppress the production of inflammatory cytokines. Stimulation of the efferent vagus has been shown to suppress inflammation in a manner dependent on the spleen and splenic nerves. The vagus does not innervate the spleen, so a synaptic connection from vagal preganglionic neurons to splenic sympathetic postganglionic neurons was suggested. We tested this idea in rats. In a preparatory operation, the anterograde tracer DiI was injected bilaterally into the dorsal motor nucleus of vagus and the retrograde tracer Fast Blue was injected into the spleen. On histological analysis 7-9 weeks later, 883 neurons were retrogradely labelled from the spleen with Fast Blue as follows: 89% in the suprarenal ganglia (65% left, 24% right); 11% in the left coeliac ganglion; but none in the right coeliac or either of the superior mesenteric ganglia. Vagal terminals anterogradely labelled with DiI were common in the coeliac but sparse in the suprarenal ganglia, and confocal analysis revealed no putative synaptic connection with any Fast Blue-labelled cell in either ganglion. Electrophysiological experiments in anaesthetized rats revealed no effect of vagal efferent stimulation on splenic nerve activity or on that of 15 single splenic-projecting neurons recorded in the suprarenal ganglion. Together, these findings indicate that vagal efferent neurons in the rat neither synapse with splenic sympathetic neurons nor drive their ongoing activity.


Subject(s)
Inflammation/physiopathology , Neurons, Efferent/physiology , Spleen/innervation , Spleen/physiopathology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology , Vagus Nerve/physiopathology , Animals , Ganglion Cysts/physiopathology , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Synapses/pathology
5.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 301(3): R623-31, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21677275

ABSTRACT

The pattern of regional brain activation in humans during thirst associated with dehydration, increased blood osmolality, and decreased blood volume is not known. Furthermore, there is little information available about associations between activation in osmoreceptive brain regions such as the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and the brain regions implicated in thirst and its satiation in humans. With the objective of investigating the neuroanatomical correlates of dehydration and activation in the ventral lamina terminalis, this study involved exercise-induced sweating in 15 people and measures of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) using a functional magnetic resonance imaging technique called pulsed arterial spin labeling. Regional brain activations during dehydration, thirst, and postdrinking were consistent with the network previously identified during systemic hypertonic infusions, thus providing further evidence that the network is involved in monitoring body fluid and the experience of thirst. rCBF measurements in the ventral lamina terminalis were correlated with whole brain rCBF measures to identify regions that correlated with the osmoreceptive region. Regions implicated in the experience of thirst were identified including cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortex, striatum, parahippocampus, and cerebellum. Furthermore, the correlation of rCBF between the ventral lamina terminalis and the cingulate cortex and insula was different for the states of thirst and recent drinking, suggesting that functional connectivity of the ventral lamina terminalis is a dynamic process influenced by hydration status and ingestive behavior.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Dehydration/physiopathology , Drinking , Exercise , Hypothalamus/physiopathology , Sweating , Thirst , Water-Electrolyte Balance , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Blood Volume , Brain Mapping/methods , Cerebral Cortex/blood supply , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Dehydration/blood , Dehydration/etiology , Dehydration/psychology , Female , Humans , Hypothalamus/blood supply , Linear Models , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology , Osmolar Concentration , Time Factors , Young Adult
6.
Exp Physiol ; 95(1): 34-40, 2010 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19617268

ABSTRACT

There is a large body of evidence indicating that sympathetic nerves to individual organs are specifically controlled, but only few studies have compared the control of cardiac sympathetic nerve activity (CSNA) with activity in other sympathetic nerves. In this review, changes in sympathetic activity to the heart and kidneys are described during increases in brain [Na+] and in heart failure (HF). In conscious sheep, increases in brain [Na+] increased CSNA and arterial pressure and, conversely, decreased renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), promoting urinary sodium loss. These organ-specific effects are mediated via a neural pathway that includes an angiotensinergic synapse, the lamina terminalis and the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. There is also evidence of differential control of SNA in HF. In normal sheep, the resting burst incidence of CSNA was much lower than that of RSNA, whereas in HF they increased to similar, almost maximal levels in both nerves. Arterial baroreflex control of both these nerves was unchanged in HF, but the response of CSNA to changes in blood volume was almost absent. These data indicate that in HF the lower arterial pressure leads to reduced baroreflex inhibition of SNA, which, together with the lack of an inhibitory response to the increased volume and cardiac pressures, would contribute to the sympathoexcitation observed. These studies demonstrate differences in the control of CSNA and RSNA, enabling selective actions on the heart and kidney to restore fluid and electrolyte homeostasis in the case of elevated brain [Na+] and to increase cardiac output in HF.


Subject(s)
Heart/innervation , Heart/physiology , Kidney/innervation , Kidney/physiology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology , Animals , Humans , Signal Transduction/physiology
7.
J Physiol ; 587(Pt 21): 5009-10, 2009 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19880875
8.
Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol ; 35(5-6): 701-5, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18067594

ABSTRACT

1. Many mammals maintain a constant core body temperature in the face of a heat load by using evaporative cooling responses, such as sweating, panting and spreading of saliva. These cooling mechanisms incur a body fluid deficit if the fluid lost as sweat, saliva or respiratory moisture is not replaced by the ingestion of water; body fluid hypertonicity and hypovolaemia result. 2. Evidence in several mammals shows that, as they become dehydrated, evaporative cooling mechanisms such as sweating and panting are inhibited so that further fluid loss from the body is reduced. As a result, core temperature in the dehydrated animal is maintained at a higher than normal level. 3. Increasing the osmotic pressure of plasma has an inhibitory effect on panting and sweating in mammals. It has been proposed that osmoreceptors mediate these inhibitory influences of plasma hypertonicity on sweating and panting. 4. The suppression of panting in dehydrated sheep is mediated by cerebral osmoreceptors that are probably located in the lamina terminalis. We speculate that osmoreceptors in the lamina terminalis may also influence thermoregulatory sweating. 5. When dehydrated animals drink water, sweating and panting resume rapidly before water has been absorbed from the gut. It is likely that the act of drinking initiates a reflex that can override the osmoreceptor inhibition of panting, resulting in core temperature falling back quickly to a normal level.


Subject(s)
Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Mammals/physiology , Water-Electrolyte Balance/physiology , Animals , Dehydration , Drinking , Homeostasis , Humans , Water/metabolism
9.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 293(6): H3465-70, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17906112

ABSTRACT

Intravenous B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) enhances the bradycardia of reflexes from the heart, including the von Bezold-Jarisch reflex, but its site of action is unknown. The peptide is unlikely to penetrate the blood-brain barrier but could act on afferent or efferent reflex pathways. To investigate the latter, two types of experiment were performed on urethane-anesthetized (1.4 g/kg iv) rats. First, the activity was recorded extracellularly from single cardiac vagal motoneurons (CVMs) in the nucleus ambiguus. CVMs were identified by antidromic activation from the cardiac vagal branch and by their barosensitivity. Phenyl biguanide (PBG), injected via the right atrium in bolus doses of 1-5 mug to evoke the von Bezold-Jarisch reflex, caused a dose-related increase in CVM activity and bradycardia. BNP infusion (25 pmol.kg(-1).min(-1) iv) significantly enhanced both the CVM response to PBG (n = 5 rats) and the reflex bradycardia, but the log-linear relation between those two responses over a range of PBG doses was unchanged by BNP. The reflex bradycardia was not enhanced in five matched time-control rats receiving only vehicle infusions. In five other rats the cervical vagi were cut and the peripheral right vagus was stimulated supramaximally at frequencies of 1-20 Hz. The bradycardic responses to these stimuli were unchanged before, during, and after BNP infusion. We conclude that systemic BNP in a moderate dose enhances the von Bezold-Jarisch reflex activation of CVM, in parallel with the enhanced reflex bradycardia. That enhancement is due entirely to an action before the vagal efferent arm of the reflex pathway.


Subject(s)
Baroreflex , Bradycardia/metabolism , Heart Rate , Heart/innervation , Motor Neurons/metabolism , Nerve Tissue Proteins/metabolism , Vagus Nerve/metabolism , Action Potentials , Animals , Biguanides/pharmacology , Bradycardia/physiopathology , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Efferent Pathways/metabolism , Electric Stimulation , Heart Rate/drug effects , Infusions, Intravenous , Male , Motor Neurons/drug effects , Nerve Tissue Proteins/administration & dosage , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Time Factors , Vagotomy , Vagus Nerve/drug effects
10.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol ; 293(1): H798-804, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17434976

ABSTRACT

Increased sympathetic drive to the heart worsens prognosis in heart failure, but the level of cardiac sympathetic nerve activity (CSNA) has been assessed only by indirect methods, which do not permit testing of whether its control by arterial baroreceptors is defective. To do this, CSNA was measured directly in 16 female sheep, 8 of which had been ventricularly paced at 200-220 beats/min for 4-6 wk, until their ejection fraction fell to between 35 and 40%. Recording electrodes were surgically implanted in the cardiac sympathetic nerves, and after 3 days' recovery the responses to intravenous phenylephrine and nitroprusside infusions were measured in conscious sheep. Electrophysiological recordings showed that resting CSNA (bursts/100 heartbeats) was significantly elevated in heart-failure sheep (89 +/- 3) compared with normal animals (46 +/- 6; P < 0.001). This increased CSNA was not accompanied by any increase in the low-frequency power of heart-rate variability. The baroreceptor-heart rate reflex was significantly depressed in heart failure (maximum gain -3.29 +/- 0.56 vs. -5.34 +/- 0.66 beats.min(-1).mmHg(-1) in normal animals), confirming published findings. In contrast, the baroreflex control of CSNA was undiminished (maximum gain in heart failure -6.33 +/- 1.06 vs. -6.03 +/- 0.95%max/mmHg in normal sheep). Direct recordings in a sheep model of heart failure thus show that resting CSNA is strikingly increased, but this is not due to defective control by arterial baroreceptors.


Subject(s)
Arteries/physiopathology , Baroreflex , Blood Pressure , Cardiac Output, Low/physiopathology , Heart Rate , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiopathology , Animals , Female , Sheep
11.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 289(4): R1107-15, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15961539

ABSTRACT

Anatomical studies indicate that sympathetic preganglionic neurons receive inputs from several brain stem cell groups, but the functional significance of this organization for vasomotor control is not known. We studied the roles of two brain stem premotor cell groups, the medullary raphé and the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), in determining the activity of sympathetic vasomotor supply to the tail of urethane-anesthetized, artificially ventilated rats. Chemical inactivation of either RVLM (bilaterally) or raphé cells by microinjecting glycine (120-200 nl, 0.5 M) or muscimol (40-160 nl, 2.1-8 mM) was sufficient to inhibit ongoing tail sympathetic fiber activity and to block its normally strong response to mild cooling via the trunk skin (reducing rectal temperature from 38.5 to 37 degrees C). After bilateral RVLM inactivation, tail sympathetic fibers could still be excited by chemical stimulation of raphé neurons (l-glutamate, 120 nl, 50 mM), and strong cooling (rectal temperature approximately 33 degrees C) caused a low level of ongoing activity. After chemical inhibition of raphé neurons, however, neither strong cooling nor chemical stimulation of RVLM neurons activated tail sympathetic fibers. Electrical stimulation of the RVLM elicited tail sympathetic fiber volleys before and after local anesthesia of the raphé (150-500 nl of 5% tetracaine), demonstrating the existence of an independent descending excitatory pathway from the RVLM. The data show that neurons in both the medullary raphé and the RVLM, acting together, provide the essential drive to support vasomotor tone to the tail. Inputs from these two premotor nuclei interact in a mutually facilitatory manner to determine tonic, and cold-induced, tail sympathetic activity.


Subject(s)
Intralaminar Thalamic Nuclei/physiology , Neural Pathways/physiology , Raphe Nuclei/physiology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology , Tail/innervation , Tail/physiology , Vasomotor System/physiology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Brain Stem/physiology , Male , Neurons/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Tail/blood supply
12.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 287(4): R824-32, 2004 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15205184

ABSTRACT

The dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus (DMH) is believed to play a key role in mediating vasomotor and cardiac responses evoked by an acute stress. Inhibition of neurons in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) greatly reduces the increase in renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) evoked by activation of the DMH, indicating that RVLM neurons mediate, at least in part, the vasomotor component of the DMH-evoked response. In this study, the first aim was to determine whether neurons in the medullary raphe pallidus (RP) region also contribute to the DMH-evoked vasomotor response, because it has been shown that the DMH-evoked tachycardia is mediated by the RP region. The second aim was to directly assess the effect of DMH activation on the firing rate of RVLM sympathetic premotor neurons. In urethane-anesthetized rats, injection of the GABA(A) receptor agonist muscimol (but not vehicle solution) in the RP region caused a modest ( approximately 25%) but significant reduction in the increase in RSNA evoked by DMH disinhibition (by microinjection of bicuculline). In other experiments, disinhibition of the DMH resulted in a powerful excitation (increase in firing rate of approximately 400%) of 5 out of 6 spinally projecting barosensitive neurons in the RVLM. The results indicate that neurons in the RP region make a modest contribution to the renal sympathoexcitatory response evoked from the DMH and also that sympathetic premotor neurons in the RVLM receive strong excitatory inputs from DMH neurons, consistent with the view that the RVLM plays a key role in mediating sympathetic vasomotor responses arising from the DMH.


Subject(s)
Dorsomedial Hypothalamic Nucleus/physiology , Medulla Oblongata/physiology , Raphe Nuclei/physiology , Animals , Bicuculline/pharmacology , Blood Pressure/drug effects , Dorsomedial Hypothalamic Nucleus/cytology , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electric Stimulation , GABA Agonists/pharmacology , GABA Antagonists/pharmacology , Heart Rate/drug effects , Kidney/drug effects , Kidney/innervation , Male , Medulla Oblongata/cytology , Microinjections , Muscimol/pharmacology , Neural Pathways/cytology , Neural Pathways/drug effects , Neural Pathways/physiology , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/physiology , Raphe Nuclei/cytology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Stereotaxic Techniques
13.
J Neuroendocrinol ; 16(4): 340-7, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15089972

ABSTRACT

The lamina terminalis, located in the anterior wall of the third ventricle, is comprised of the subfornical organ, median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) and organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT). The subfornical organ and OVLT are two of the brain's circumventricular organs that lack the blood-brain barrier, and are therefore exposed to the ionic and hormonal environment of the systemic circulation. Previous investigations in sheep and rats show that this region of the brain has a crucial role in osmoregulatory vasopressin secretion and thirst. The effects of lesions of the lamina terminalis, studies of immediate-early gene expression and electrophysiological data show that all three regions of the lamina terminalis are involved in osmoregulation. There is considerable evidence that physiological osmoreceptors subserving vasopressin release are located in the dorsal cap region of the OVLT and possibly also around the periphery of the subfornical organ and in the MnPO. The circulating peptide hormones angiotensin II and relaxin also have access to peptide specific receptors (AT(1) and LGR7 receptors, respectively) in the subfornical organ and OVLT, and both angiotensin II and relaxin act on the subfornical organ to stimulate water drinking in the rat. Studies that combined neuroanatomical tracing and detection of c-fos expression in response to angiotensin II or relaxin suggest that both of these circulating peptides act on neurones within the dorsal cap of the OVLT and the periphery of the subfornical organ to stimulate vasopressin release.


Subject(s)
Hypothalamus/metabolism , Hypothalamus/physiology , Vasopressins/metabolism , Water-Electrolyte Balance/physiology , Animals , Subfornical Organ/metabolism , Subfornical Organ/physiology
14.
Adv Anat Embryol Cell Biol ; 172: III-XII, 1-122, back cover, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12901335

ABSTRACT

The brain's three sensory circumventricular organs, the subfornical organ, organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and the area postrema lack a blood brain barrier and are the only regions in the brain in which neurons are exposed to the chemical environment of the systemic circulation. Therefore they are ideally placed to monitor the changes in osmotic, ionic and hormonal composition of the blood. This book describes their. General structure and relationship to the cerebral ventricles Regional subdivisions Vasculature and barrier properties Neurons, glia and ependymal cells Receptors, neurotransmitters, neuropeptides and enzymes Neuroanatomical connections Functions.


Subject(s)
Area Postrema/anatomy & histology , Area Postrema/physiology , Subfornical Organ/anatomy & histology , Subfornical Organ/physiology , Animals , Cerebral Ventricles/anatomy & histology , Cerebral Ventricles/physiology , Ependyma/anatomy & histology , Ependyma/physiology , Humans , Mammals
15.
Int J Biochem Cell Biol ; 35(6): 901-18, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12676175

ABSTRACT

Angiotensinogen, the precursor molecule for angiotensins I, II and III, and the enzymes renin, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), and aminopeptidases A and N may all be synthesised within the brain. Angiotensin (Ang) AT(1), AT(2) and AT(4) receptors are also plentiful in the brain. AT(1) receptors are found in several brain regions, such as the hypothalamic paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, the lamina terminalis, lateral parabrachial nucleus, ventrolateral medulla and nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS), which are known to have roles in the regulation of the cardiovascular system and/or body fluid and electrolyte balance. Immunohistochemical and neuropharmacological studies suggest that angiotensinergic neural pathways utilise Ang II and/or Ang III as a neurotransmitter or neuromodulator in the aforementioned brain regions. Angiotensinogen is synthesised predominantly in astrocytes, but the processes by which Ang II is generated or incorporated in neurons for utilisation as a neurotransmitter is unknown. Centrally administered AT(1) receptor antagonists or angiotensinogen antisense oligonucleotides inhibit sympathetic activity and reduce arterial blood pressure in certain physiological or pathophysiological conditions, as well as disrupting water drinking and sodium appetite, vasopressin secretion, sodium excretion, renin release and thermoregulation. The AT(4) receptor is identical to insulin-regulated aminopeptidase (IRAP) and plays a role in memory mechanisms. In conclusion, angiotensinergic neural pathways and angiotensin peptides are important in neural function and may have important homeostatic roles, particularly related to cardiovascular function, osmoregulation and thermoregulation.


Subject(s)
Astrocytes/physiology , Brain/physiology , Renin-Angiotensin System/physiology , Animals , Astrocytes/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Humans , Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A/metabolism , Renin/metabolism
16.
Acta Physiol Scand ; 177(3): 219-25, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12608992

ABSTRACT

AIM: The idea that, like somatic motor neurones, sympathetic pre-ganglionic neurones are engaged to fire in a pre-determined recruitment order, was investigated in chloralose-anaesthetized cats. METHOD: Ongoing pre-ganglionic spike activity was recorded from fine filaments of otherwise intact thoracic white rami, while post-ganglionic activity was recorded from the whole inferior cardiac nerve (ICN). Spikes of individual pre-ganglionic fibres were extracted from few-fibre recordings by spike shape analysis. Presumed cardiac pre-ganglionic fibres were further selected by the spike-triggered average of ICN activity, which showed a clear peak when triggered by their spikes. RESULTS: To test whether particular pre-ganglionic neurones were recruited to fire in a set time sequence, the spontaneous spike trains of fibres in the same white ramus were compared by cross correlation. In all 24 cases the cross correlograms showed a central peak (width 163 +/- 15 ms), indicating that the two neurones tended to fire together. In 23 of the 24 cases that peak spanned the zero point on the time axis, showing that each neurone could fire either first or second. To test whether pre-ganglionic neurones were recruited in a set order with respect to burst amplitude, the firing of individual pre-ganglionic neurones was compared with the strength of the corresponding post-ganglionic burst discharge, on a heartbeat-by-heartbeat basis. Pre-ganglionic neurone firing was probabilistic: each neurone fired with only a minority of post-ganglionic bursts. Firing probability increased linearly with burst amplitude (30 of 30 cases). The slope of the relation varied between units, but its intercept was always close to the origin (zero pre-ganglionic firing probability at zero post-ganglionic burst size). CONCLUSION: The data indicate that, at least under these conditions, sympathetic pre-ganglionic neurones follow no set recruitment sequence in either their firing times or with respect to the strength of the autonomic motor output.


Subject(s)
Neurons/physiology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology , Action Potentials , Animals , Blood Pressure/physiology , Cats , Ganglia, Sympathetic/physiology , Heart/innervation , Heart/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Time Factors
17.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol ; 283(6): R1327-34, 2002 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12388471

ABSTRACT

Extracellular recordings were made in the right nucleus ambiguus of urethane-anesthetized rats from 33 neurons that were activated at constant latency from the craniovagal cardiac branch. Their calculated conduction velocities were in the B-fiber range (1.6-13.8 m/s, median 4.2), and most (22/33) were silent. Active units were confirmed as cardiac vagal motoneurons (CVM) by the collision test for antidromic activation and by the presence of cardiac rhythmicity in their resting discharge (9/9). Brief arterial pressure rises of 20-50 mmHg increased the activity in five of five CVM by 0.1 +/- 0.02 spikes. s(-1). mmHg(-1) from a resting 3.8 +/- 1.2 spikes/s; they also recruited activity in two of four previously silent cardiac branch-projecting neurons. CVM firing was modulated by the central respiratory cycle, showing peak activity during inspiration (8/8). Rat CVM thus show firing properties similar to those in other species, but their respiratory pattern is distinct. These findings are discussed in relation to mechanisms of respiratory sinus arrhythmia.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials , Basal Ganglia/cytology , Basal Ganglia/physiology , Heart/innervation , Motor Neurons/physiology , Vagus Nerve/cytology , Vagus Nerve/physiology , Animals , Baroreflex/physiology , Male , Neural Conduction/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Respiration
18.
J Physiol ; 543(Pt 3): 849-58, 2002 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231643

ABSTRACT

We investigated the thermoregulatory responses of sympathetic fibres supplying the tail in urethane-anaesthetised rats. When skin and rectal temperatures were kept above 39 degrees C, tail sympathetic fibre activity was low or absent. When the trunk skin was cooled episodically by 2-7 degrees C by a water jacket, tail sympathetic activity increased in a graded fashion below a threshold skin temperature of 37.8 +/- 0.6 degrees C, whether or not core (rectal) temperature changed. Repeated cooling episodes lowered body core temperature by 1.3-3.1 degrees C, and this independently activated tail sympathetic fibre activity, in a graded fashion, below a threshold rectal temperature of 38.4 +/- 0.2 degrees C. Tail blood flow showed corresponding graded vasoconstrictor responses to skin and core cooling, albeit over a limited range. Tail sympathetic activity was more sensitive to core than to trunk skin cooling by a factor that varied widely (24-fold) between animals. Combined skin and core cooling gave additive or facilitatory responses near threshold but occlusive interactions with stronger stimuli. Unilateral warming of the preoptic area reversibly inhibited tail sympathetic activity. This was true for activity generated by either skin or core cooling. Single tail sympathetic units behaved homogeneously. Their sensitivity to trunk skin cooling was 0.3 +/- 0.08 spikes s(-1) degrees C(-1) and to core cooling was 2.2 +/- 0.5 spikes s(-1) degrees C(-1). Their maximum sustained firing rate in the cold was 1.82 +/- 0.35 spikes s(-1).


Subject(s)
Adrenergic Fibers/physiology , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Tail/innervation , Animals , Cold Temperature , Hot Temperature , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Rectum , Regional Blood Flow/physiology , Skin Temperature/physiology , Tail/blood supply , Tail/physiology , Vasoconstriction/physiology
19.
Neuroscience ; 109(2): 329-37, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11801368

ABSTRACT

As neurones develop they are faced with choices as to which genes to express, to match their final phenotype to their role in the nervous system. A number of processes can guide these decisions. Within the autonomic and sensory nervous systems, there are a handful of examples that suggest that one mechanism that may match phenotype to function is the presence of target-derived differentiation factors. We tested whether the rat pineal gland controls the expression of a neuropeptide (neuropeptide Y) and a calcium-binding protein (calbindin) in sympathetic postganglionic neurones that innervate it. We first showed that the chemical phenotype of sympathetic neurones innervating the rat pineal includes the expression of both neuropeptide Y and the calcium-binding protein, calbindin. After transplanting the pineal gland of neonatal rats into the submandibular salivary gland of neonatal hosts, it was innervated by sympathetic axons from the surrounding salivary gland tissue, which do not normally express neuropeptide Y and calbindin. The presence of the pineal gland led to the appearance of neuropeptide Y and calbindin in many of the postganglionic neurones that innervated the graft. From these findings we suggest that, like the rodent sweat gland, the pineal gland generates a signal that can direct the neurochemical phenotype of innervating sympathetic neurones.


Subject(s)
Cell Communication/physiology , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Nerve Growth Factors/metabolism , Neuropeptide Y/metabolism , Pineal Gland/growth & development , Pineal Gland/innervation , S100 Calcium Binding Protein G/metabolism , Sympathetic Fibers, Postganglionic/growth & development , Animals , Axons/metabolism , Axons/ultrastructure , Calbindins , Female , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Graft Survival/physiology , Male , Neurons/cytology , Neurons/metabolism , Phenotype , Pineal Gland/transplantation , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Salivary Glands/innervation , Salivary Glands/metabolism , Salivary Glands/surgery , Skin Transplantation , Sympathetic Fibers, Postganglionic/cytology , Sympathetic Fibers, Postganglionic/metabolism
20.
J Physiol ; 535(Pt 3): 841-54, 2001 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11559779

ABSTRACT

1. In a search for sympathetic premotor neurons subserving thermoregulatory functions, medullary raphé-spinal neurons were studied in urethane-anaesthetized, artificially ventilated, paralysed rats. Extracellular unit recordings were made from a region previously shown to drive the sympathetic supplies to tail vessels and brown adipose tissue. Neurons that were antidromically activated by stimulation across the intermediate region of the upper lumbar cord (the origin of the tail sympathetic outflow) were selected for study. 2. Non-noxious cooling stimuli were delivered to the animal's shaved trunk by circulating cold instead of warm water through a water jacket. Cooling increased the activity of 21 out of 76 raphé-spinal neurons by 1.0 +/- 0.2 spikes x s(-1) degrees C(-1) for falls in skin temperature of 3-5 degrees C below a threshold of 35.0 +/- 0.6 degrees C. Their responses followed skin temperature in a graded manner, and did so whether or not there was any change in core (rectal) temperature. 3. Indirect observations suggested that seven of the neurons that were activated by skin cooling were also activated by falls in core temperature (by 2.1 +/- 0.7 spikes x s(-1) x degrees C(-1) below a threshold of 36.1 +/- 0.7 degrees C), while the remainder were unaffected by core cooling. 4. An additional 7/76 raphé-spinal neurons showed evidence of inhibition (activity reduced by 2.1 +/- 0.5 spikes x s(-1) x degrees C(-1)) when the trunk skin was cooled. 5. Cold-activated raphé-spinal neurons were found in the nuclei raphé magnus and pallidus, centred at the level of the caudal part of the facial nucleus. Their spinal axons conducted at velocities between 3.4 and 29 m x s(-1) (median 6.8). 6. Drug-induced rises in arterial pressure partially inhibited the discharge of 6/14 cold-activated raphé-spinal neurons. Weak-to-moderate cardiac modulation (10-70 %) was present in arterial pulse-triggered histograms of the activity of 11/21 cold-activated raphé-spinal neurons, and 6/6 showed evidence of ventilatory modulation (two strongly, four weakly) in pump-triggered histograms. 7. Raphé-spinal neurons responded to cooling in the absence of any change in the electroencephalogram pattern (6/6 neurons). 8. Most cold-activated raphé-spinal neurons responded to noxious tail pinch (13/21 inhibited, 6/21 excited), as did most thermally unresponsive raphé-spinal cells in the same region (19/41 excited, 9/41 inhibited). 9. It is suggested that these cold-activated raphé-spinal neurons may constitute a premotor pathway that drives sympathetically mediated cold defences, such as cutaneous vasoconstriction or thermogenesis. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that a brainstem reflex, with additional descending input signalling body core temperature, may mediate autonomic responses to environmental cooling.


Subject(s)
Neurons/physiology , Raphe Nuclei/physiology , Spinal Cord/physiology , Animals , Body Temperature/physiology , Cold Temperature , Electroencephalography , Electrophysiology , Male , Microelectrodes , Pain/physiopathology , Patch-Clamp Techniques , Physical Stimulation , Raphe Nuclei/cytology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Skin Temperature/physiology , Spinal Cord/cytology , Stereotaxic Techniques , Sympathetic Nervous System/cytology , Sympathetic Nervous System/physiology
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