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Publication : Dbx1 Pre-Bötzinger Complex Interneurons Comprise the Core Inspiratory Oscillator for Breathing in Unanesthetized Adult Mice.

First Author  Vann NC Year  2018
Journal  eNeuro Volume  5
Issue  3 PubMed ID  29845107
Mgi Jnum  J:266873 Mgi Id  MGI:6256886
Doi  10.1523/ENEURO.0130-18.2018 Citation  Vann NC, et al. (2018) Dbx1 Pre-Botzinger Complex Interneurons Comprise the Core Inspiratory Oscillator for Breathing in Unanesthetized Adult Mice. eNeuro 5(3):ENEURO.0130-18.2018
abstractText  The brainstem pre-Botzinger complex (preBotC) generates inspiratory breathing rhythms, but which neurons comprise its rhythmogenic core? Dbx1-derived neurons may play the preeminent role in rhythm generation, an idea well founded at perinatal stages of development but incompletely evaluated in adulthood. We expressed archaerhodopsin or channelrhodopsin in Dbx1 preBotC neurons in intact adult mice to interrogate their function. Prolonged photoinhibition slowed down or stopped breathing, whereas prolonged photostimulation sped up breathing. Brief inspiratory-phase photoinhibition evoked the next breath earlier than expected, whereas brief expiratory-phase photoinhibition delayed the subsequent breath. Conversely, brief inspiratory-phase photostimulation increased inspiratory duration and delayed the subsequent breath, whereas brief expiratory-phase photostimulation evoked the next breath earlier than expected. Because they govern the frequency and precise timing of breaths in awake adult mice with sensorimotor feedback intact, Dbx1 preBotC neurons constitute an essential core component of the inspiratory oscillator, knowledge directly relevant to human health and physiology.
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