4.4 Article

Late-Expiratory Activity: Emergence and Interactions With the Respiratory CPG

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 5, Pages 2713-2729

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00334.2010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [R01 NS-057815]
  2. NIH, NINS
  3. Royal Society

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Molkov YI, Abdala APL, Bacak BJ, Smith JC, Paton JFR, Rybak IA. Late-expiratory activity: emergence and interactions with the respiratory CPG. J Neurophysiol 104: 2713-2729, 2010. First published September 8, 2010; doi:10.1152/jn.00334.2010. The respiratory rhythm and motor pattern are hypothesized to be generated by a brain stem respiratory network with a rhythmogenic core consisting of neural populations interacting within and between the pre-Botzinger (pre-BotC) and Botzinger (BotC) complexes and controlled by drives from other brain stem compartments. Our previous large-scale computational model reproduced the behavior of this network under many different conditions but did not consider neural oscillations that were proposed to emerge within the retrotrapezoid nucleus/parafacial respiratory group (RTN/pFRG) and drive preinspiratory (or late-expiratory, late-E) discharges in the abdominal motor output. Here we extend the analysis of our previously published data and consider new data on the generation of abdominal late-E activity as the basis for extending our computational model. The extended model incorporates an additional late-E population in RTN/pFRG, representing a source of late-E oscillatory activity. In the proposed model, under normal metabolic conditions, this RTN/pFRG oscillator is inhibited by BotC/pre-BotC circuits, and the late-E oscillations can be released by either hypercapnia-evoked activation of RTN/pFRG or by hypoxia-dependent suppression of RTN/pFRG inhibition by BotC/pre-BotC. The proposed interactions between BotC/pre-BotC and RTN/pFRG allow the model to reproduce several experimentally observed behaviors, including quantal acceleration of abdominal late-E oscillations with progressive hypercapnia and quantal slowing of phrenic activity with progressive suppression of pre-BotC excitability, as well as to predict a release of late-E oscillations by disinhibition of RTN/pFRG under normal conditions. The extended model proposes mechanistic explanations for the emergence of RTN/pFRG oscillations and their interaction with the brain stem respiratory network.

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