4.1 Article

Architecture of vagal motor units controlling striated muscle of esophagus: Peripheral elements patterning peristalsis?

Journal

AUTONOMIC NEUROSCIENCE-BASIC & CLINICAL
Volume 179, Issue 1-2, Pages 90-98

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.autneu.2013.08.069

Keywords

Deglutition; Enteric; Motor neuron; Myenteric plexus; NOS neurons; Peristalsis; Swallowing

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health, USA [DK27627, DK61317]

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Little is known about the architecture of the vagal motor units that control esophageal striated muscle, in spite of the fact that these units are necessary, and responsible, for peristalsis. The present experiment was designed to characterize the motor neuron projection fields and terminal arbors forming esophageal motor units. Nucleus ambiguus compact formation neurons of the rat were labeled by bilateral intracranial injections of the anterograde tracer dextran biotin. After tracer transport, thoracic and abdominal esophagi were removed and prepared as whole mounts of muscle wall without mucosa or submucosa. Labeled terminal arbors of individual vagal motor neurons (n = 78) in the esophageal wall were inventoried, digitized and analyzed morphometrically. The size of individual vagal motor units innervating striated muscle, throughout thoracic and abdominal esophagus, averaged 52 endplates per motor neuron, a value indicative of fine motor control. A majority (77%) of the motor terminal arbors also issued one or more collateral branches that contacted neurons, including nitric oxide synthase-positive neurons, of local myenteric ganglia. Individual motor neuron terminal arbors co-innervated, or supplied endplates in tandem to, both longitudinal and circular muscle fibers in roughly similar proportions (i.e., two endplates to longitudinal for every three endplates to circular fibers). Both the observation that vagal motor unit collaterals project to myenteric ganglia and the fact that individual motor units co-innervate longitudinal and circular muscle layers are consistent with the hypothesis that elements contributing to peristaltic programming inhere, or are hardwired, in the peripheral architecture of esophageal motor units. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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