Journal
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 29, Issue 33, Pages 10341-10349Publisher
SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1963-09.2009
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Funding
- Parker B. Francis Foundation
- National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
- Bumpus Foundation
- Veterans Affairs Medical Center
- Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-National Institutes of Health
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Central serotonin (5-HT) neurons modulate many vital brain functions, including respiratory control. Whether breathing depends critically on 5-HT neurons, or whether their influence is excitatory or inhibitory, remains controversial. Here we show that neonatal Lmx1b(flox/flox;ePet-Cre/+) mice (also called Lmx1b(f/f/p) mice), which selectively lack serotonin neurons, display frequent and severe apnea lasting as long as 55 s. This was associated with a marked decrease in ventilation to less than one-half of normal. These respiratory abnormalities were most severe during the postnatal period, markedly improving by the time the pups were 2-4 weeks old. Despite the severe breathing dysfunction, many of these mice survived, but there was a high perinatal mortality, and those that survived had a decrease in growth rate until the age at which the respiratory defects resolved. Consistent with these in vivo observations, respiratory output was markedly reduced in isolated brainstem-spinal cord preparations from neonatal Lmx1b(f/f/p) mice and completely blocked in perfused brain preparations from neonatal rats treated with selective antagonists of 5-HT(2A) and neurokinin 1 (NK-1) receptors. The ventilatory deficits in neonatal Lmx1b(f/f/p) mice were reversed in vitro and in vivo with agonists of 5-HT(2A) and/or NK-1 receptors. These results demonstrate that ventilatory output in the neonatal period is critically dependent on serotonin neurons, which provide excitatory drive to the respiratory network via 5-HT(2A) and NK-1 receptor activation. These findings provide insight into the mechanisms of sudden infant death syndrome, which has been associated with abnormalities of 5-HT neurons and of cardiorespiratory control.
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