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Publication : Identification of cytokine-specific sensory neural signals by decoding murine vagus nerve activity.

First Author  Zanos TP Year  2018
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  115
Issue  21 Pages  E4843-E4852
PubMed ID  29735654 Mgi Jnum  J:262496
Mgi Id  MGI:6159180 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1719083115
Citation  Zanos TP, et al. (2018) Identification of cytokine-specific sensory neural signals by decoding murine vagus nerve activity. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115(21):E4843-E4852
abstractText  The nervous system maintains physiological homeostasis through reflex pathways that modulate organ function. This process begins when changes in the internal milieu (e.g., blood pressure, temperature, or pH) activate visceral sensory neurons that transmit action potentials along the vagus nerve to the brainstem. IL-1beta and TNF, inflammatory cytokines produced by immune cells during infection and injury, and other inflammatory mediators have been implicated in activating sensory action potentials in the vagus nerve. However, it remains unclear whether neural responses encode cytokine-specific information. Here we develop methods to isolate and decode specific neural signals to discriminate between two different cytokines. Nerve impulses recorded from the vagus nerve of mice exposed to IL-1beta and TNF were sorted into groups based on their shape and amplitude, and their respective firing rates were computed. This revealed sensory neural groups responding specifically to TNF and IL-1beta in a dose-dependent manner. These cytokine-mediated responses were subsequently decoded using a Naive Bayes algorithm that discriminated between no exposure and exposures to IL-1beta and TNF (mean successful identification rate 82.9 +/- 17.8%, chance level 33%). Recordings obtained in IL-1 receptor-KO mice were devoid of IL-1beta-related signals but retained their responses to TNF. Genetic ablation of TRPV1 neurons attenuated the vagus neural signals mediated by IL-1beta, and distal lidocaine nerve block attenuated all vagus neural signals recorded. The results obtained in this study using the methodological framework suggest that cytokine-specific information is present in sensory neural signals within the vagus nerve.
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