4.7 Article

Spinal Atypical Protein Kinase C Activity Is Necessary to Stabilize Inactivity-Induced Phrenic Motor Facilitation

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 46, Pages 16510-16520

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2631-12.2012

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL105511]

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The neural network controlling breathing must establish rhythmic motor output at a level adequate to sustain life. Reduced respiratory neural activity elicits a novel form of plasticity in circuits driving the diaphragm known as inactivity-induced phrenic motor facilitation (iPMF), a rebound increase in phrenic inspiratory output observed once respiratory neural drive is restored. The mechanisms underlying iPMF are unknown. Here, we demonstrate in anesthetized rats that spinal mechanisms give rise to iPMF and that iPMF consists of at least two mechanistically distinct phases: (1) an early, labile phase that requires atypical PKC (PKC zeta and/or PKC iota/lambda) activity to transition to a (2) late, stable phase. Early (but not late) iPMF is associated with increased interactions between PKC zeta/iota and the scaffolding protein ZIP (PKC zeta-interacting protein)/p62 in spinal regions associated with the phrenic motor pool. Although PKC zeta/iota activity is necessary for iPMF, spinal atypical PKC activity is not necessary for phrenic long-term facilitation (pLTF) following acute intermittent hypoxia, an activity-independent form of spinal respiratory plasticity. Thus, while iPMF and pLTF both manifest as prolonged increases in phrenic burst amplitude, they arise from distinct spinal cellular pathways. Our data are consistent with the hypotheses that (1) local mechanisms sense and respond to reduced respiratory-related activity in the phrenic motor pool and(2) inactivity-induced increases in phrenic inspiratory output require local PKC zeta/iota activity to stabilize into along-lasting iPMF. Although the physiological role of iPMF is unknown, we suspect that iPMF represents a compensatory mechanism, assuring adequate motor output in a physiological system in which prolonged inactivity ends life.

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