4.6 Review

Evolution and physiology of neural oxygen sensing

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2014.00302

Keywords

oxygen sensing; hypoxia; peripheral chemoreflex; brainstem; autonomic and respiratory control

Categories

Funding

  1. CAPES
  2. Sao Paulo state Foundation (FAPESP)
  3. CNPq

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Major evolutionary trends in animal physiology have been heavily influenced by atmospheric O-2 levels. Amongst other important factors, the increase in atmospheric O-2 which occurred in the Pre-Cambrian and the development of aerobic respiration beckoned the evolution of animal organ systems that were dedicated to the absorption and transportation of O-2, e.g., the respiratory and cardiovascular systems of vertebrates. Global variations of O-2 levels in post-Cambrian periods have also been correlated with evolutionary changes in animal physiology, especially cardiorespiratory function. Oxygen transportation systems are, in our view, ultimately controlled by the brain related mechanisms, which senses changes in O-2 availability and regulates autonomic and respiratory responses that ensure the survival of the organism in the face of hypoxic challenges. In vertebrates, the major sensorial system for oxygen sensing and responding to hypoxia is the peripheral chemoreflex neuronal pathways, which includes the oxygen chemosensitive glomus cells and several brainstem regions involved in the autonomic regulation of the cardiovascular system and respiratory control. In this review we discuss the concept that regulating O-2 homeostasis was one of the primordial roles of the nervous system. We also review the physiology of the peripheral chemoreflex, focusing on the integrative repercussions of chemoreflex activation and the evolutionary importance of this system, which is essential for the survival of complex organisms such as vertebrates. The contribution of hypoxia and peripheral chemoreflex for the development of diseases associated to the cardiovascular and respiratory systems is also discussed in an evolutionary context.

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