The rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) contains barosensitive, bulbospinal neurons that provide the main supraspinal excitatory input to sympathetic vasomotor preganglionic neurons. However, the phenotype of the critical RVLM cells has not been conclusively determined. The goal of the current study was to identify the proportion of electrophysiologically defined, putative, presympathetic RVLM neurons that are C1 cells. We used a juxtacellular labeling technique to individually fill spontaneously active, barosensitive, bulbospinal RVLM neurons with biotinamide following electrophysiological characterization in chloralose-anesthetized rats. To determine whether these neurons could be classified as C1 cells, the biotinamide-labeled cells were processed for detection of tyrosine hydroxylase. The majority of barosensitive bulbospinal RVLM neurons were tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactive (TH-ir; 28 of 39). All of the barosensitive bulbospinal RVLM neurons with axonal conduction velocities in the C fiber range (<1 m/second) were TH-ir (n = 16), whereas faster conducting cells (1 to 7 m/second) were either lightly TH-ir (n = 12) or not detectably TH-ir (n = 11). Adjacent respiratory-related RVLM units labeled with biotinamide were not detectably TH-ir (n = 10). To verify that TH-ir cells were indeed adrenergic, a subset of barosensitive bulbospinal cells labeled with biotinamide were examined for phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase immunoreactivity (PNMT-ir). Three slowly conducting cells had detectable PNMT-ir, and two fast-conducting cells had no detectable PNMT-ir. These results indicate that the majority of bulbospinal RVLM neurons with putative sympathoexcitatory function are C1 cells.
1. Barosensitive, bulbospinal neurons in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM), which provide the major tonic excitatory drive to sympathetic vasomotor neurons, are prominently inhibited by GABA. 2. A major source of the GABAergic inhibition to presympathetic RVLM neurons arises from an area immediately caudal to the RVLM, known as the caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM). 3. Arterial baroreceptor afferents projecting to the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) provide a major tonic excitatory input to GABAergic CVLM neurons. These CVLM cells are a critical component for baroreflex-mediated changes in presympathetic RVLM neuronal activity, sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) and arterial pressure (AP). 4. Some GABAergic CVLM neurons are tonically activated by inputs independent of arterial baroreceptors or the NTS, providing a GABAergic-mediated inhibition of the presympathetic RVLM neurons that is autonomous of baroreceptor inputs. 5. GABAergic CVLM neurons appear to play two distinct, yet important, roles in the regulation of sympathetic vasomotor tone and AP. They dampen immediate changes in AP via the baroreflex and tonically inhibit the activity of the presympathetic RVLM neurons by baroreceptor-independent mechanisms. This baroreceptor-independent, GABAergic inhibition of presympathetic RVLM neurons may play an important role in determining the long-term level of sympathetic vasomotor tone and AP.
We examined the effects of destroying bulbospinal catecholaminergic neurons with the immunotoxin anti-dopamine beta-hydroxylase-saporin (anti-DbetaH-Sap) on splanchnic nerve activity (SNA) and selected sympathetic reflexes in rats. Anti-DbetaH-Sap was administered into the thoracic spinal cord with the retrograde tracer fast blue. After 3-5 wk, anti-DbetaH-Sap eliminated most bulbospinal C1 (>74%), C3 ( approximately 84%), A5 ( approximately 98%), and A6 cells. Noncatecholaminergic bulbospinal neurons of the rostral ventrolateral medulla and serotonergic neurons were spared. Under chloralose anesthesia, mean arterial pressure and heart rate of anti-DbetaH-Sap-treated rats (3-5 wk) were normal. Resting SNA was not detectably altered, but the baroreflex range and gain were reduced approximately 40% (P < 0.05). Phenyl biguanide-induced decreases in mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and SNA were unchanged by anti-DbetaH-Sap, but the sympathoexcitatory response to intravenous cyanide was virtually abolished (P < 0.05). Rats that received spinal injections of saporin conjugated to an anti-mouse IgG had intact bulbospinal C1 and A5 cells and normal physiological responses. These data suggest that C1 and A5 neurons contribute modestly to resting SNA and cardiopulmonary reflexes. However, bulbospinal catecholaminergic neurons appear to play a prominent sympathoexcitatory role during stimulation of chemoreceptors.
The main source of excitatory drive to the sympathetic preganglionic neurons that control blood pressure is from neurons located in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM). This monosynaptic input includes adrenergic (C1), peptidergic, and noncatecholaminergic neurons. Some of the cells in this pathway are suspected to be glutamatergic, but conclusive evidence is lacking. In the present study we sought to determine whether these presympathetic neurons express the vesicular glutamate transporter BNPI/VGLUT1 or the closely related gene DNPI, the rat homolog of the mouse vesicular glutamate transporter VGLUT2. Both BNPI/VGLUT1 and DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNAs were detected in the medulla oblongata by in situ hybridization, but only DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA was present in the RVLM. Moreover, BNPI immunoreactivity was absent from the thoracic spinal cord lateral horn. DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA was present in many medullary cells retrogradely labeled with Fluoro-Gold from the spinal cord (T2; four rats). Within the RVLM, 79% of the bulbospinal C1 cells contained DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA. Bulbospinal noradrenergic A5 neurons did not contain DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA. The RVLM of six unanesthetized rats subjected to 2 hours of hydralazine-induced hypotension contained tenfold more c-Fos-ir DNPI/VGLUT2 neurons than that of six saline-treated controls. c-Fos-ir DNPI/VGLUT2 neurons included C1 and non-C1 neurons (3:2 ratio). In seven barbiturate-anesthetized rats, 16 vasomotor presympathetic neurons were filled with biotinamide and analyzed for the presence of tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity and/or DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA. Biotinamide-labeled neurons included C1 and non-C1 cells. Most non-C1 (9/10) and C1 presympathetic cells (5/6) contained DNPI/VGLUT2 mRNA. In conclusion, DNPI/VGLUT2 is expressed by most blood pressure-regulating presympathetic cells of the RVLM. The data suggest that these neurons may be glutamatergic and that the C1 adrenergic phenotype is one of several secondary phenotypes that are differentially expressed by subgroups of these cells.
The sympathetic nerves that maintain blood pressure are modulated by the central respiratory generator. Neurones in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) that drive this sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) also display central respiratory drive (CRD)-related activity, suggesting integration of respiratory and cardiovascular regulatory systems within the brainstem. Whether CRD-related activity in the RVLM is due to direct inputs from central respiratory neurones or modulation of cardiovascular-related neurones that influence the RVLM is not known. The caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM) contains GABAergic neurones that tonically inhibit presympathetic RVLM neurones and are essential for the production of numerous cardiovascular reflexes. The present study sought to determine whether cardiovascular-related GABAergic neurones in the CVLM display CRD-related activity. The firing patterns of individual barosensitive CVLM neurones were examined in relation to phrenic nerve activity in chloralose-anaesthetized, ventilated, neuromuscularly blocked, vagotomized rats. Histograms of phrenic-triggered CVLM neuronal activity showed that all baro-activated CVLM neurones displayed one of four patterns of CRD-related activity: (i) inspiratory peak (n = 15), (ii) inspiratory depression (n = 15), (iii) inspiratory peak with postinspiratory depression (n = 10), and (iv) postinspiratory peak (n = 9). A subset of each type of CVLM neurone was identified as GABAergic by individually filling the recorded neurone with biotinamide and observing expression of GAD67 mRNA by in situ hybridization (n = 10). These data suggest that the activity of GABAergic neurones in the CVLM is regulated by cardiovascular and respiratory inputs, and baro-activated GABAergic CVLM neurones may contribute to CRD-related modulation of presympathetic RVLM neurones and SNA.
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