4.7 Article

When Norepinephrine Becomes a Driver of Breathing Irregularities: How Intermittent Hypoxia Fundamentally Alters the Modulatory Response of the Respiratory Network

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 36-50

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3644-12.2014

Keywords

breathing; glycine; intermittent hypoxia; neuromodulation; preBotzinger complex; rhythmogenesis

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1 HL 099296, PO1 HL090554]

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Neuronal networks are endogenously modulated by aminergic and peptidergic substances. These modulatory processes are critical for maintaining normal activity and adapting networks to changes in metabolic, behavioral, and environmental conditions. However, disturbances in neuromodulation have also been associated with pathologies. Using whole animals (in vivo) and functional brainstem slices (in vitro) from mice, we demonstrate that exposure to acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) leads to fundamental changes in the neuromodulatory response of the respiratory network located within the preBotzinger complex (preBotC), an area critical for breathing. Norepinephrine, which normally regularizes respiratory activity, renders respiratory activity irregular after AIH. Respiratory irregularities are caused both in vitro and in vivo by AIH, which increases synaptic inhibition within the preBotC when norepinephrine is endogenously or exogenously increased. These irregularities are prevented by blocking synaptic inhibition before AIH. However, regular breathing cannot be reestablished if synaptic inhibition is blocked after AIH. We conclude that subtle changes in synaptic transmission can have dramatic consequences at the network level as endogenously released neuromodulators that are normally adaptive become the drivers of irregularity. Moreover, irregularities in the preBotC result in irregularities in the motor output in vivo and in incomplete transmission of inspiratory activity to the hypoglossus motor nucleus. Our finding has basic science implications for understanding network functions in general, and it may be clinically relevant for understanding pathological disturbances associated with hypoxic episodes such as those associated with myocardial infarcts, obstructive sleep apneas, apneas of prematurity, Rett syndrome, and sudden infant death syndrome.

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