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Publication : Brainstem Dbh(+) neurons control allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity.

First Author  Su Y Year  2024
Journal  Nature Volume  631
Issue  8021 Pages  601-609
PubMed ID  38987587 Mgi Jnum  J:358639
Mgi Id  MGI:7782715 Doi  10.1038/s41586-024-07608-5
Citation  Su Y, et al. (2024) Brainstem Dbh(+) neurons control allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity. Nature 631(8021):601-609
abstractText  Exaggerated airway constriction triggered by repeated exposure to allergen, also called hyperreactivity, is a hallmark of asthma. Whereas vagal sensory neurons are known to function in allergen-induced hyperreactivity(1-3), the identity of downstream nodes remains poorly understood. Here we mapped a full allergen circuit from the lung to the brainstem and back to the lung. Repeated exposure of mice to inhaled allergen activated the nuclei of solitary tract (nTS) neurons in a mast cell-, interleukin-4 (IL-4)- and vagal nerve-dependent manner. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing, followed by RNAscope assay at baseline and allergen challenges, showed that a Dbh(+) nTS population is preferentially activated. Ablation or chemogenetic inactivation of Dbh(+) nTS neurons blunted hyperreactivity whereas chemogenetic activation promoted it. Viral tracing indicated that Dbh(+) nTS neurons project to the nucleus ambiguus (NA) and that NA neurons are necessary and sufficient to relay allergen signals to postganglionic neurons that directly drive airway constriction. Delivery of noradrenaline antagonists to the NA blunted hyperreactivity, suggesting noradrenaline as the transmitter between Dbh(+) nTS and NA. Together, these findings provide molecular, anatomical and functional definitions of key nodes of a canonical allergen response circuit. This knowledge informs how neural modulation could be used to control allergen-induced airway hyperreactivity.
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