The state-dependent noradrenergic activation of hypoglossal motoneurons plays an important role in the maintenance of upper airway patency and pathophysiology of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH), a major pathogenic factor of OSA, contributes to the risk for developing neurodegenerative disorders in OSA patients. Using anterograde tracer, channelrhodopsin-2, we mapped axonal projections from noradrenergic A7 and SubCoeruleus neurons to hypoglossal nucleus in DBH-cre mice and assessed the effect of CIH on these projections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
July 2022
The activity of hypoglossal motoneurons plays an important role in the maintenance of upper airway patency. Both withdrawal of noradrenergic excitatory drive and increase of cholinergic inhibition markedly decrease excitability of hypoglossal motoneurons during sleep and especially during rapid-eye-movement (REM) stage. This leads to increased collapsibility of upper airway during sleep, which is the major neurological factor of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) pathophysiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurol
September 2018
Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a common sleep-related respiratory disorder that is associated with cognitive, cardiovascular, and metabolic morbidities. The major cause of OSA is the sleep-related reduction of upper airway muscle tone that leads to airway obstructions in individuals with anatomically narrow upper airway. This reduction is mainly due to the suppressant effect of sleep on hypoglossal motoneurons that innervate upper airway muscles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sleep-related depression of excitability of upper airway motoneurons is a major neurological cause of obstructive sleep apnea whereas a disruption in the inhibition of spinal motoneurons during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep causes the REM sleep behavioral disorder. The large amount of experimental data has been obtained that deal with neurochemical mechanisms that are responsible for sleep-related depression of various motoneuron groups. However, there is a disagreement regarding the outcome of these studies primarily due to the use of different animal models and approaches, as well as due to differences in quantification and interpretation of obtained results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the pharyngeal muscles become relaxed during sleep, which leads to a partial or complete closure of upper airway. Experimental studies suggest that withdrawal of noradrenergic and serotonergic drives importantly contributes to depression of hypoglossal motoneurons and, therefore, may contribute to OSA pathophysiology; however, specific cellular and synaptic mechanisms remain unknown. In this new study, we developed a biophysical network model to test the hypothesis that, to explain experimental observations, the neuronal network for monoaminergic control of excitability of hypoglossal motoneurons needs to include excitatory and inhibitory perihypoglossal interneurons that mediate noradrenergic and serotonergic drives to hypoglossal motoneurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeural mechanisms of obstructive sleep apnea, a common sleep-related breathing disorder, are incompletely understood. Hypoglossal motoneurons, which provide tonic and inspiratory activation of genioglossus (GG) muscle (a major upper airway dilator), receive catecholaminergic input from medullary A1/C1 neurons. We aimed to determine the contribution of A1/C1 neurons in control of GG muscle during sleep and wakefulness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe reassessed and provided new insights into the findings that were obtained in our previous experiments that employed the injections of combined adrenergic, serotonergic, GABAergic, and glycinergic antagonists into the hypoglossal nucleus in order to pharmacologically abolish the depression of hypoglossal nerve activity that occurred during carbachol-induced rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep-like state in anesthetized rats. We concluded that noradrenergic disfacilitation is the major mechanism that is responsible for approximately 90% of the depression of hypoglossal motoneurons, whereas the remaining 10% can be explained by serotonergic mechanisms that have net inhibitory effect on hypoglossal nerve activity during REM sleep-like state. We hypothesized that both noradrenergic and serotonergic state-dependent mechanisms indirectly control hypoglossal motoneuron excitability during REM sleep; their activities are integrated and mediated to hypoglossal motoneurons by reticular formation neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a novel approach to assess the excitability of hypoglossal motoneurons in rats during naturally occurring states of sleep and wakefulness. Adult rats were surgically prepared with permanently placed electrodes to record the EEG, EOG and neck EMG. A stimulating/recording miniature tripolar cuff electrode was implanted around the intact hypoglossal nerve and a head-restraining device was bonded to the calvarium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen rapid eye movement (REM) sleep occurs, noradrenergic cells become silent, with the abolition of activity in locus coeruleus (LC) neurons seen as a key event permissive for the occurrence of REM sleep. However, it is not known whether silencing of other than LC noradrenergic neurons contributes to the generation of REM sleep. In urethane-anesthetized rats, stereotyped REM sleep-like episodes can be repeatedly elicited by injections of the cholinergic agonist, carbachol, into a discrete region of the dorsomedial pons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with glucose intolerance. Both chronic sleep disruption and recurrent blood oxygen desaturations (chronic-intermittent hypoxia, CIH) may cause, or exacerbate, metabolic derangements.
Methods: To assess the impact of CIH alone, without accompanying upper airway obstructions, on the counter-regulatory response to glucose load and cardiorespiratory parameters, we exposed adult male Sprague-Dawley rats to CIH or sham room air exchanges for 10 h/day for 7, 21, or 35 days and then, 1 day after conclusion of CIH exposure, conducted intravenous glucose-tolerance tests (ivgtt) under urethane anesthesia.
J Appl Physiol (1985)
January 2012
In obstructive sleep apnea patients, elevated activity of the lingual muscles during wakefulness protects the upper airway against occlusions. A possibly related form of respiratory neuroplasticity is present in rats exposed to acute and chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH). Since rats exposed to CIH have increased density of noradrenergic terminals and increased α(1)-adrenoceptor immunoreactivity in the hypoglossal (XII) nucleus, we investigated whether these anatomic indexes of increased noradrenergic innervation translate to increased sensitivity of XII motoneurons to noradrenergic activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRationale: Patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) adapt to the anatomical vulnerability of their upper airway by generating increased activity in upper airway-dilating muscles during wakefulness. Norepinephrine (NE) and serotonin (5-HT) mediate, through α₁-adrenergic and 5-HT₂A receptors, a wake-related excitatory drive to upper airway motoneurons. In patients with OSA, this drive is necessary to maintain their upper airway open.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe perifornical (PF) region of the posterior hypothalamus plays an important role in the regulation of sleep-wake states and motor activity. Disinhibition of PF neurons by the GABA(A) receptor antagonist, bicuculline, has been used to study the mechanisms of wake- and motor activity-promoting effects that emanate from the PF region. Bicuculline activates PF neurons, including the orexin-containing cells that have major excitatory projections to brainstem noradrenergic and serotonergic neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarbachol, a cholinergic agonist, and GABA(A) receptor antagonists injected into the pontine dorsomedial reticular formation can trigger rapid eye movement (REM) sleep-like state. Data suggest that GABAergic and cholinergic effects interact to produce this effect but the sites where this occurs have not been delineated. In urethane-anesthetized rats, in which carbachol effectively elicits REM sleep-like episodes (REMSLE), we tested the ability of 10 nL microinjections of carbachol (10 mm) and bicuculline (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuroscience
November 2008
Noradrenergic (NE) excitatory drive maintains activity of hypoglossal (XII) motoneurons during wakefulness. In predisposed persons, sleep-related decrements of NE cell activity may contribute to hypotonia of upper airway muscles innervated by XII motoneurons. The goal of this study was to determine whether NE neurons of the pontine A7 group, an anatomically identified source of NE projections to the XII nucleus, provide significant, endogenous NE excitatory drive to XII motoneurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPontine noradrenergic neurons of the locus coeruleus (LC) and sub-coeruleus (SubC) region cease firing during rapid eye movement sleep (REMS). This plays a permissive role in the generation of REMS and may contribute to state-dependent modulation of transmission in the CNS. Whether all pontomedullary catecholaminergic neurons, including those in the A1/C1, A2/C2 and A7 groups, have REMS-related suppression of activity has not been tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies in behaving animals suggest that neurones located in the perifornical (PF) region of the posterior hypothalamus promote wakefulness and suppress sleep. Among such cells are those that synthesize the excitatory peptides, orexins (ORX). Lack of ORX, or their receptors, is associated with narcolepsy/cataplexy, a disorder characterized by an increased pressure for rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, we reported that the suppression of hypoglossal (XII) motoneuronal activity that occurs during the carbachol-induced, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep-like state is abolished by the microinjection into the XII nucleus of a drug mix that antagonizes aminergic excitation and amino acid-mediated inhibition (prazosin, methysergide, bicuculline and strychnine). We now assess the role of glycinergic inhibition in the depression of XII motoneuronal activity and estimate the distribution of the antagonists around the XII nucleus at the time when they are effective. Towards the first goal, REM sleep-like episodes were elicited in urethane-anesthetized rats by 10 nl carbachol microinjections into the dorsomedial pons prior to, and at different times after, combined microinjections into the XII nucleus of only three antagonists (strychnine omitted).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: Two pontine reticular regions are implicated in cholinergic triggering of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep: the dorsomedial tegmental region and the ventral nucleus pontis oralis. We previously determined that, in urethane-anesthetized rats, microinjections of a cholinergic agonist, carbachol, into the dorsal region produce REM sleep-like effects comprising cortical activation, hippocampal theta rhythm, suppression of hypoglossal (XII) nerve activity, and silencing of pontine noradrenergic neurons. Our goal was to determine whether carbachol injections into the ventral nucleus pontis oralis elicits comparable effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Respir Crit Care Med
November 2005
Rationale: Studies of hypoglossal (XII) motoneurons that innervate the genioglossus muscle, an upper airway dilator, suggested that the suppression of upper airway motor tone during REM sleep is caused by withdrawal of excitation mediated by norepinephrine and serotonin.
Objectives: Our objectives were to determine whether antagonism of aminergic receptors located in the XII nucleus region can abolish the REM sleep-like atonia of XII motoneurons, and whether both serotonergic and noradrenergic antagonists are required to achieve this effect.
Methods: REM sleep-like episodes were elicited in anesthetized rats by pontine carbachol injections before and at various times after microinjection of prazosin and methysergide combined, or of only one of the drugs, into the XII nucleus.
Respir Physiol Neurobiol
November 2004
Activation of pontomedullary cholinergic neurons may directly and indirectly cause depression of respiratory motoneuronal activity, activation of respiratory premotor neurons and acceleration of the respiratory rate during REM sleep, as well as activation of breathing during active wakefulness. These effects may be mediated by distinct subpopulations of cholinergic neurons. The relative inactivity of cholinergic neurons during slow-wave sleep also may contribute to the depressant effects of this state on breathing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is hypothesized that the suppression of motor activity (atonia) that occurs during REM sleep is caused by the combined inhibition of motoneurons by glycine or GABA and withdrawal of excitation mediated by serotonin and norepinephrine. However, it is not known whether these mechanisms can fully account for the atonia. In urethane-anesthetized, paralyzed and artificially ventilated rats, REM sleep-like episodes can be repeatedly elicited by microinjections of a cholinergic agonist, carbachol, into the dorsomedial pons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Physiol (1985)
October 2002
The A5 noradrenergic neurons are considered important for cardiorespiratory regulation. We hypothesized that A5 cells are silenced during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, thereby contributing to cardiorespiratory changes and suppression of hypoglossal (XII) motoneuronal activity. We used an anesthetized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated rat in which pontine microinjections of carbachol trigger signs of REM sleep, including hippocampal theta rhythm, motor suppression, and silencing of locus coeruleus neurons.
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