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Publication : A carotid body-brainstem neural circuit mediates sighing in hypoxia.

First Author  Yao Y Year  2023
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  33
Issue  5 Pages  827-837.e4
PubMed ID  36750092 Mgi Jnum  J:350034
Mgi Id  MGI:7448113 Doi  10.1016/j.cub.2023.01.019
Citation  Yao Y, et al. (2023) A carotid body-brainstem neural circuit mediates sighing in hypoxia. Curr Biol 33(5):827-837.e4
abstractText  Increased ventilation is a critical process that occurs when the body responds to a hypoxic environment. Sighs are long, deep breaths that prevent alveolar collapse, and their frequency is significantly increased by hypoxia. In this study, we first show that sighing is induced by hypoxia as a function of increased hypoxic severity and that hypoxia-induced sighing is capable of increasing the oxygen saturation in a mouse model. We next found that the gastrin-releasing peptide (Grp) expressing neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) are important in mediating hypoxia-induced sighing. Retrograde tracing from these Grp neurons reveals their direct afferent input from the petrosal ganglion neurons that innervate the carotid body, the major peripheral chemoreceptor that senses blood oxygen. Acute hypoxia preferentially activates these Grp neurons in the NTS. Photoactivation of these neurons through their projections in the inspiratory rhythm generator in the ventral medulla induces sighing, whereas genetic ablation or chemogenetic silencing of these neurons specifically diminishes the sighs, but not other respiratory responses, induced by hypoxia. Finally, the mice with reduced sighing in hypoxia exhibit an elevated heart-rate increase, which may compensate for maintaining the blood oxygen level. Therefore, we identified a neural circuit that connects the carotid body to the breathing control center in the ventral medulla with a specific function for hypoxia-induced sighing, which restores the oxygen level.
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