4.4 Article

Sex-specific Effects of Stress on Respiratory Control: Plasticity, Adaptation, and Dysfunction

Journal

COMPREHENSIVE PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 2097-2134

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cphy.c200022

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Funding

  1. Canada Research Chair in Respiratory Neurobiology
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  4. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development CNPq-Brazil [206239/2014-9-PDE]

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This article discusses the neurobiological principles of respiratory control and the impact of stress on respiratory function. It highlights the persistent effects of early life stress on adult respiratory control and gender-specific effects, as well as the similarities between stressed rats' respiratory phenotype and clinical manifestations of respiratory control disorders.
As our understanding of respiratory control evolves, we appreciate how the basic neurobiological principles of plasticity discovered in other systems shape the development and function of the respiratory control system. While breathing is a robust homeostatic function, there is growing evidence that stress disrupts respiratory control in ways that predispose to disease. Neonatal stress (in the form of maternal separation) affects classical respiratory control structures such as the peripheral O-2 sensors (carotid bodies) and the medulla (e.g., nucleus of the solitary tract). Furthermore, early life stress disrupts the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH), a structure that has emerged as a primary determinant of the intensity of the ventilatory response to hypoxia. Although underestimated, the PVH's influence on respiratory function is a logical extension of the hypothalamic control of metabolic demand and supply. In this article, we review the functional and anatomical links between the stress neuroendocrine axis and the medullary network regulating breathing. We then present the persistent and sex-specific effects of neonatal stress on respiratory control in adult rats. The similarities between the respiratory phenotype of stressed rats and clinical manifestations of respiratory control disorders such as sleep-disordered breathing and panic attacks are remarkable. These observations are in line with the scientific consensus that the origins of adult disease are often found among developmental and biological disruptions occurring during early life. These observations bring a different perspective on the structural hierarchy of respiratory homeostasis and point to new directions in our understanding of the etiology of respiratory control disorders. (C) 2021 American Physiological Society.

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