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Publication : Vagal Sensory Neuron Subtypes that Differentially Control Breathing.

First Author  Chang RB Year  2015
Journal  Cell Volume  161
Issue  3 Pages  622-633
PubMed ID  25892222 Mgi Jnum  J:223335
Mgi Id  MGI:5648684 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2015.03.022
Citation  Chang RB, et al. (2015) Vagal Sensory Neuron Subtypes that Differentially Control Breathing. Cell 161(3):622-33
abstractText  Breathing is essential for survival and under precise neural control. The vagus nerve is a major conduit between lung and brain required for normal respiration. Here, we identify two populations of mouse vagus nerve afferents (P2ry1, Npy2r), each a few hundred neurons, that exert powerful and opposing effects on breathing. Genetically guided anatomical mapping revealed that these neurons densely innervate the lung and send long-range projections to different brainstem targets. Npy2r neurons are largely slow-conducting C fibers, while P2ry1 neurons are largely fast-conducting A fibers that contact pulmonary endocrine cells (neuroepithelial bodies). Optogenetic stimulation of P2ry1 neurons acutely silences respiration, trapping animals in exhalation, while stimulating Npy2r neurons causes rapid, shallow breathing. Activating P2ry1 neurons did not impact heart rate or gastric pressure, other autonomic functions under vagal control. Thus, the vagus nerve contains intermingled sensory neurons constituting genetically definable labeled lines with different anatomical connections and physiological roles.
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