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Molecular cell types as functional units of the efferent vagus nerve

Journal

SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 156, Issue -, Pages 210-218

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2023.07.007

Keywords

Tenth cranial nerve; Vagal motor neuron; Parasympathetic preganglionic; Dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus; Nucleus ambiguus

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In this article, we review how genetic technology and single-cell genomics are revealing the organizational principles of the efferent vagus in unprecedented detail.
The vagus nerve vitally connects the brain and body to coordinate digestive, cardiorespiratory, and immune functions. Its efferent neurons, which project their axons from the brainstem to the viscera, are thought to comprise functional units - neuron populations dedicated to the control of specific vagal reflexes or organ functions. Previous research indicates that these functional units differ from one another anatomically, neurochemically, and physiologically but have yet to define their identity in an experimentally tractable way. However, recent work with genetic technology and single-cell genomics suggests that genetically distinct subtypes of neurons may be the functional units of the efferent vagus. Here we review how these approaches are revealing the organizational principles of the efferent vagus in unprecedented detail.

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