Abstract:
The ventrolateral pons contains the A5 group of noradrenergic neurons which regulate
the circulation and probably breathing. The present experiments were designed to identify
these neurons definitively in vivo, to examine their response to chemoreceptor stimuli (carotid
body stimulation and changes in brain pH) and to determine their effects on sympathetic
outflow. Bulbospinal A5 neurons, identified by juxtacellular labelling in anaesthetized rats, had
a slow regular discharge, were vigorously activated by peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation
with cyanide, but only mildly activated by hyperoxic hypercapnia (central chemoreceptor
stimulation). The caudal end of the A5 region also contained neurons with properties reminiscent
of retrotrapezoid neurons. These cells lacked a spinal axon and were characterized by a robust
response to CO2. The pH sensitivity of A5 neurons, examined in brain slices from neonatal (postnatal
days 6–10) tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-GFP transgenic mice, was about 10 times smaller
than that of similarly recorded retrotrapezoid neurons. Selective stimulation of the A5 neurons in
rats using channelrhodopsin optogenetics (A5 TH neurons represented 66% of transfected cells)
produced fivefold greater activation of the renal nerve than the lumbar sympathetic chain. In
summary, adult A5 noradrenergic neurons are vigorously activated by carotid body stimulation.
This effect presumably contributes to the increase in visceral sympathetic nerve activity elicited
by acute hypoxia. A5 neurons respond weakly to hypercapnia in vivo or to changes in pH in slices
suggesting that their ability to sense local variations in brain pH or PCO2 is limited.
Citation:
Kanbar, R., Depuy, S. D., West, G. H., Stornetta, R. L., & Guyenet, P. G. (2011). Regulation of visceral sympathetic tone by A5 noradrenergic neurons in rodents. The Journal of physiology, 589(4), 903-917.