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Volume 16, Number 20,
Issue of October 15, 1996
pp. 6526-6536
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Respiratory Neurons Mediating the Breuer-Hering Reflex
Prolongation of Expiration in Rat
Fumiaki Hayashi,
Sharon K. Coles, and
Donald R. McCrimmon
Department of Physiology, Northwestern University Medical School,
Chicago, Illinois 60611-3008
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Afferent input from pulmonary stretch receptors is important in the
control of the timing of inspiratory and expiratory phases of the
respiratory cycle. The current study was undertaken to identify neurons
within a column of respiratory neurons in the ventrolateral medulla
(termed the ventral respiratory group, VRG) that, when activated by
lung inflation, produce the Breuer-Hering (BH) reflex in which lung
inflation causes inspiratory termination and expiratory prolongation.
Intracellular recordings of VRG neurons revealed three groups of
inspiratory (I) and two groups of expiratory (E) neurons similar to
previous descriptions: I-augmenting (I-Aug), I-decrementing (I-Dec),
I-plateau (I-All), E-augmenting (E-Aug), and E-decrementing (E-Dec)
neurons. Low-intensity, low-frequency stimulation of a vagus nerve
elicited paucisynaptic EPSPs in E-Dec, I-Aug, and I-All neurons that
could be divided into two groups on the basis of latency (2.8 ± 0.1 msec, n = 10; 4.0 ± 0.1 msec,
n = 17). IPSPs were elicited in I-Aug and I-All
neurons (4.8 ± 0.1 msec, n = 12). However,
only E-Dec neurons were depolarized when the BH reflex was activated by
lung inflation (7.5 cm H2O) or mimicked by vagus nerve
stimulation (50 Hz). All other neurons were hyperpolarized and ceased
firing during BH reflex-mediated expiratory prolongation. A subset of
E-Dec neurons (termed E-Decearly) discharged before
inspiratory termination and could contribute to inspiratory
termination. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that a
group of E-Dec neurons receives a paucisynaptic (probably disynaptic)
input from pulmonary afferents and, in turn, inhibits inspiratory
neurons, thereby lengthening expiration.
Key words:
Breuer-Hering reflex;
control of breathing;
pulmonary stretch receptor;
respiratory pattern;
vagus nerve;
ventral
respiratory group
INTRODUCTION
Afferent modulation is a critical component of all
movements. In locomotion, for example, the detailed coordination
between legs depends on afferent input, which determines the precise
timing of phase transitions (Rossignol et al., 1988 ). For breathing
movements, pulmonary afferents provide powerful and important
modulation of inspiratory and expiratory phase timing as well as
respiratory muscle pattern. Lung inflation activates slowly adapting
pulmonary stretch receptors, which have axons in the vagus nerve and
give rise to the Breuer-Hering (BH) reflex, consisting of inspiratory
(I) termination and expiratory (E) prolongation. The first neuron in
the reflex pathway is likely to be interneurons, termed pump cells, in
the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (Bonham and McCrimmon, 1990 ). In
preliminary work (our unpublished observations), intracellular and
extracellular labeling suggests that these neurons send axons toward a
column of respiratory neurons in the ventrolateral medulla termed the
ventral respiratory group (VRG; Feldman, 1986 ). In cats, activation of
at least two groups of propriobulbar VRG neurons may account for the BH
reflex changes in respiratory pattern (Richter et al., 1986 ). One group
(late-I neurons) discharges briefly at the I-E phase transition and is
excited by lung inflation (Feldman and Cohen, 1978 ). However, the
failure of cross-correlation analysis to reveal a significant
inhibitory input from late-I neurons to other I neurons raises
questions about the proposed role of these neurons in inspiratory
termination (Feldman and Speck, 1983 ; Segers et al., 1987 ).
A second group, termed E-Dec (or postinspiratory) neurons, is
also excited by lung inflation or vagus nerve stimulation in cats
(Feldman and Cohen, 1978 ; Richter, 1982 ; Remmers et al., 1986 ; Manabe
and Ezure, 1988 ) and rats (Parkes et al., 1994 ). These neurons
characteristically begin to discharge immediately after the I-E phase
transition and then exhibit a declining rate of discharge, becoming
silent before the onset of the next I phase. Lung inflation prolongs
the period of activity of these neurons, at least in cats, thereby
providing a potential mechanism for prolonging expiration (Feldman and
Cohen, 1978 ; Remmers et al., 1986 ; Richter et al., 1986 ; Manabe and
Ezure, 1988 ). Consistent with this hypothesis, E-Dec neurons provide
inhibitory input to medullary inspiratory and expiratory neurons in
cats (Lindsey et al., 1987 ; Ezure and Manabe, 1988 ; Manabe and Ezure,
1988 ).
The current study examined the hypothesis that activation of E-Dec
neurons is responsible for the BH reflex-mediated prolongation of
expiration in rats. An underlying assumption was that the expiratory
prolongation occurs by an active process in which a group of inhibitory
neurons is paucisynaptically activated by stretch receptors during lung
inflation. Hence, two criteria were established for the identification
of candidate VRG neurons with a central role in expiratory
prolongation. The neurons must (1) be activated during BH
reflex-induced expiratory prolongation and (2) exhibit paucisynaptic
EPSPs in response to vagus nerve stim-ulation. The findings are
consistent with E-Dec neurons mediating the BH reflex prolongation of
expiration.
A preliminary abstract of this study has been published (Hayashi et
al., 1991 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animal preparation. Thirty-six male Sprague Dawley
rats weighing 260-520 gm were anesthetized with urethane (1.5 gm/kg,
i.p.; concentration, 0.75 gm/ml; volume, 1 ml/500 gm) or sodium
pentobarbital (Nembutal, 65 mg/kg, i.p.). No differences were noted in
the response to lung inflation between animals anesthetized with
urethane or pentobarbital, and the results were combined. The adequacy
of anesthesia was determined by the absence of changes in blood
pressure, heart rate, or respiratory rate in response to a noxious paw
pinch. Additional doses (10-20% of the initial dose) of anesthetics
were injected intravenously as needed. The trachea and a femoral artery
and vein were cannulated to permit mechanical ventilation, arterial
blood pressure monitoring, and infusion of fluids, respectively.
Atropine methyl nitrate (0.5-1.0 mg/kg, i.v.) and dexamethasone (4 mg/kg, i.v.) were injected to minimize tracheal secretion and brain
edema, respectively. Bicarbonate saline containing (in mM)
Na+ 154, Cl 124, and HCO 3
30 was infused continuously at a flow rate of 3-8 ml/hr to maintain
circulatory stability (Quintin et al., 1989 ). A phrenic nerve was
dissected via a dorsolateral approach, cut distally, and mounted on
bipolar silver hook electrodes for recording. Both vagi were sectioned
in 14 rats. In 3 rats one vagus was cut, and both vagi were left intact
in 19 animals in which lung inflation was used to activate the BH
reflex. One or more of the following nerves were isolated for recording
or antidromic stimulation: cervical vagus nerve (n = 29), superior laryngeal nerve (n = 8), recurrent
laryngeal nerve (n = 3), pharyngeal branch of the vagus
nerve (n = 6), and glossopharyngeal nerve
(n = 3). Rectal temperature was maintained within
35-38°C by a heating lamp. Animals were thoracotomized, ventilated
(with humidified 100% oxygen) at a positive end-expiratory pressure of
2-3 cm H2O, and paralyzed with pancuronium bromide (2 mg,
supplemented with 1 mg i.v., as needed). Airway pressure was monitored
continuously by means of a pressure transducer attached to the
expiratory line in some animals. The head of the animal was fixed with
ear bars in a stereotaxic frame, and lumbar vertebrae and the spinous
process of T2 were fixed by clamps. In three animals
bipolar stimulating electrodes were inserted bilaterally into the
lateral funiculi of spinal cord segment C2 and positioned
at the depth at which maximal orthodromic activation of the phrenic
nerve was elicited. Large parietal and occipital craniotomies and a
laminectomy (C1-C4) were made to minimize
movement artifact. In some animals the caudal part of the cerebellum
was removed to facilitate access to the rostral medulla. The pia mater
was removed at the point of electrode entry, and the exposed medulla
and spinal cord were covered with warmed paraffin oil.
Stimulation and recording. Efferent nerve activity was
amplified (bandpass filter, 100-10,000 Hz), rectified, integrated
(Paynter filter; time constant, 15 msec), and recorded on magnetic
tape. Glass microelectrodes for intracellular recording were beveled
and filled with 2 M K-citrate (DC resistance 8-20
M ). The bridge balance of the electrode was monitored by
applying a 2-3 Hz hyperpolarizing current pulse (4 msec, 0.1-0.5 nA).
Intracellular membrane potentials (DC) were recorded by using a
high-impedance circuit (Axoclamp 2A, Axon Instruments, Foster City,
CA). To visualize synaptic noise, we amplified and bandpass-filtered
intracellular membrane potentials (100-10,000 Hz). In some
experiments, PSPs evoked by stimulation of a vagus nerve were revealed
with the aid of averaging the response to 7-20 stimulus pulses.
Membrane potentials were measured as the difference between intra- and
extracellular potentials by using a silver, silver chloride reference
electrode inserted into a neck muscle. Only neurons with membrane
potentials more negative than 40 mV were included in this study.
Respiratory neurons were recorded within a column of cells
corresponding to the VRG in rats (Ezure et al., 1988 ; Schwarzacher et
al., 1991 ) extending between 1.5 mm rostral and 0.5 mm caudal to
calamus scriptorius, 1.7-2.5 mm lateral to the midline, and 1.7-3.5
mm ventral to the dorsal surface. The electrode was angled rostrally
16° from vertical and advanced by a piezo stepping motor. In some
experiments Neurobiotin (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) was
injected intracellularly for subsequent histological identification of
the location of recorded cells (4% in 1 M K-citrate; +2 to
+8 nA, 2 Hz, 80% duty cycle). Antidromic stimulation (0.1 msec pulse,
2-3 Hz, up to 1 mA) was used to identify cranial motoneurons and
bulbospinal neurons according to the criteria described by Lipski
(1981) .
At the end of an experiment animals were perfused transcardially with
heparinized saline, followed by 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M PBS or 10% formalin. The excised brain tissue was
transferred to a 20% sucrose-fixative mixture for at least 12 hr.
Coronal sections, 40-100 µm thick, were cut on a cryostat, and the
tissue was processed by the protocol for biotin histochemistry
described by Kita and Armstrong (1991) . Intracellular potentials,
tracheal pressure, arterial blood pressure, and synaptic noise were
displayed on a chart recorder and stored on magnetic tape.
The BH reflex was activated (in vagus intact animals) by turning off
the ventilator and applying an expiratory pressure of 7.5 cm
H2O (n = 29) or was mimicked by stimulation
of one vagus nerve (50 Hz, 0.1 msec pulse duration; current, 1-3 times
threshold; n = 29; Feldman and Gautier, 1976 ). The
threshold current for producing the BH reflex was defined as the
current that elicited a 3 sec apnea. Both lung inflation and vagus
stimulation elicited apneas lasting ~5 sec. In some rats, apnea was
produced by stimulation (50 Hz, 0.1 msec pulse duration; current, 1-3
times threshold; n = 8) of a superior laryngeal nerve.
As with vagus nerve stimulation, the threshold current for superior
laryngeal nerve stimulation was defined as the current producing a 3 sec apnea.
RESULTS
Classification of respiratory neurons
Stable intracellular recordings were obtained from 175 VRG
neurons, 136 of which were not antidromically activated by either
cranial nerve (36 experiments) or spinal cord (3 experiments)
stimulation. Discharge patterns and phasic modulation of membrane
potentials were used to designate subgroups of I and E cells with the
nomenclature of Feldman (1986) and Ezure (1990) . Figure
1 depicts the distribution (based on recording
coordinates relative to the calamus scriptorius) within the VRG of
recorded neurons that were not antidromically activated from a cranial
nerve or the spinal cord. A predominance of expiratory neurons was
recorded in the most rostral aspect in a region known as the
Bötzinger complex (Feldman, 1986 ). Additionally,
E-Decearly neurons were localized to regions that
correspond to the rostral VRG or pre-Bötzinger complex (Smith et
al., 1991a ), and E-Aug neurons were localized caudally.
Fig. 1.
Distribution of nonantidromically activated
neurons recorded in the VRG. Top panels, Schematic of
sagittal section showing distribution of recorded expiratory neurons
(left) and inspiratory neurons (right).
The ordinate shows depth below surface of brainstem; the abscissa shows
distance rostral to calamus scriptorius. Bottom panels,
The distribution of expiratory (left) and inspiratory
(right) neurons superimposed on a schematic of a
horizontal section. IV, Fourth ventricle;
NA, nucleus ambiguus; VII, facial
nucleus. Coordinates are provided relative to calamus
scriptorius.
[View Larger Version of this Image (35K GIF file)]
Inspiratory neurons
Seventy nonantidromically activated neurons (51% of
nonantidromically activated neurons) discharged during I and were
divided into three subgroups: I-decrementing (I-Dec), I-continuous
(I-All), and I-augmenting (I-Aug). I-Dec neurons (n = 10, 14% of I neurons) rapidly depolarized to a minimum level early in
inspiration (Fig. 2). They then gradually repolarized
and exhibited a declining rate of discharge. I-All neurons
(n = 16, 23%) exhibited a bell-shaped or relatively
constant level of depolarization throughout I (Figs. 2, 6). I-Aug
neurons began a progressive depolarization either at the onset of
phrenic nerve activity (n = 34, 49%; Fig. 2), or
midway through expiration (n = 10, 14%; stage II
expiration; Schwarzacher et al., 1991 ; Smith et al., 1991b ), reaching a
minimum potential at the end of I (Fig. 3). Membrane
potentials for each of these groups were measured during the silent
period of the neuron and are presented in Table 1.
Fig. 2.
Patterns of respiratory-related membrane potential
changes recorded from nonantidromically activated neurons in the
ventral respiratory group of the rat. I-Dec,
Decrementing inspiratory; I-All, constantly discharging
inspiratory; I-Aug, augmenting inspiratory;
E-Dec, decrementing expiratory;
E-Decearly, early onset
expiratory-decrementing; E-Aug, augmenting expiratory.
Top trace in each panel is membrane potential (action
potentials are clipped); bottom trace is phrenic nerve
activity.
[View Larger Version of this Image (45K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Inhibition of an I-All (top panel)
and an I-Aug (bottom panel) neuron by stimulation (50 Hz, 3 × threshold) of the ipsilateral vagus nerve. MP,
Membrane potential; Phr, phrenic nerve activity.
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
An I-Aug neuron recorded in the rostral VRG.
Top panel, The membrane potential (MP)
begins to depolarize midway through expiration and reaches maximal
depolarization during I. Action potentials are clipped; bottom
trace is integrated phrenic nerve activity
( Phr). Note that depolarization begins midway through
expiration in this vagotomized rat. Bottom panel,
Averaged IPSP (10 sweeps) evoked in the same neuron by electrical
stimulation of the ipsilateral vagus nerve. Arrow
indicates stimulus (Stim) artifact.
Arrowhead indicates IPSP onset.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
The 10 I-Aug neurons that began depolarizing during expiration were
recorded in vagotomized rats. A similar group of E-I phase-spanning
neurons has been reported by Schwarzacher et al. (1991) and Smith et
al. (1991b) . We pooled the E-I neurons with the I-Aug neurons for the
following reasons. No E-I phase-spanning neurons were recorded in 19 vagus intact animals, which suggested that vagal input suppressed the
E-phase activity. As noted by Schwarzacher et al. (1991) , passage of a
weak hyperpolarizing current readily abolished the expiratory phase
depolarization of these neurons, thereby revealing a typical I-Aug
pattern of discharge. In addition, the responses to lung inflation and
repetitive stimulation of the vagus nerve and the pattern of PSPs to
single-pulse vagus nerve stimulation seen in these neurons closely
resembled those in I-Aug neurons.
Expiratory neurons
Sixty-six nonantidromically activated neurons (49%) depolarized
during E and were divided into two subgroups: E-decrementing (E-Dec)
and E-Augmenting (E-Aug) neurons. The largest group, E-Dec neurons
(n = 56, 85% of E neurons), abruptly depolarized near
the onset of expiration, followed by a gradual repolarization and
decrementing discharge pattern as expiration progressed (Figs. 2, 5, 7,
10). Most of these neurons depolarized immediately after the I-E
transition, but a subset of five neurons (termed E-Decearly
cells; 9% of E-Dec cells) began to depolarize late in I and discharged
during the transition from I to E (Figs. 2, 4). These five neurons have
the same pattern of membrane potential shifts during the respiratory
cycle as E-Dec neurons and thus may represent an extreme pattern of
activity in a population of E-Dec neurons with a distribution in times
of discharge onset. We have separated them from other E-Dec neurons,
because their onset of discharge in late inspiration makes them
candidates for participation in the I to E phase transition (Lindsey et
al., 1987 ; Ezure, 1990 ). E-Aug neurons (n = 10, 15% of
E neurons) depolarized progressively and increased their discharge rate
as expiration progressed (Figs. 2, 8). Membrane potentials for each of
these groups were measured during the silent period of the neuron and
are presented in Table 1.
Fig. 5.
Membrane potential and synaptic input to an E-Dec
neuron recorded in the VRG. Bottom panel, EPSP evoked in
the same E-Dec neuron by electrical stimulation of the ipsilateral
vagus nerve. Arrow indicates stimulus
(Stim) artifact. Arrowhead indicates EPSP
onset. Phr, Phrenic nerve; MP, membrane
potential; Noise, amplified and filtered (100-10,000
Hz) MP signal.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
Prolonged depolarization of an E-Dec neuron during
stimulation of the ipsilateral vagus nerve at two different
intensities. Top panel, A stimulus intensity just above
threshold (50 Hz, 1.5 × threshold; X Stim) for
producing a prolongation of expiration. Bottom panel,
The vagus nerve is stimulated at an intensity (50 Hz, 3 × threshold)
sufficient to produce a period of apnea for several seconds.
MP, Membrane potential; Phr,
integrated phrenic nerve activity; Phr, phrenic nerve
activity.
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
Fig. 10.
Activation of an E-Dec neuron by maintained lung
inflation and vagus and superior laryngeal nerve stimulation (50 Hz, 3 × threshold) in a rat with intact vagus nerves. A, Lung
inflation (increased PTr) prolongs
expiratory period and increases E-Dec neuron discharge.
B, Vagus nerve stimulation (X stim; 50 µA, 50 Hz) prolongs expiration and increases E-Dec neural discharge
similar to lung inflation. C, Superior laryngeal nerve
stimulation (SLN stim; 20 µA, 50 Hz) prolongs
expiration beyond the period of stimulation and causes a corresponding
maintained depolarization of the E-Dec neuron.
Arrowheads in B and C
indicate depolarization of the E-Dec neuron in phase with the
ventilator-induced lung inflation. All traces are from the same neuron.
MP, Membrane potential; Phr,
integrated phrenic nerve activity; PTr,
tracheal pressure.
[View Larger Version of this Image (54K GIF file)]
Fig. 4.
Membrane potential of an E-Decearly
cell that depolarizes at the transition from inspiration to expiration
(A, B). Note the hyperpolarization of the
E-Decearly cell during most of the phrenic nerve burst. The
dashed line in B correlates the first
spike in the E-Decearly cell with the ongoing phrenic nerve
activity. C, Short latency EPSP evoked in the same
neuron by stimulation (at arrow) of the ipsilateral
vagus nerve. Arrow indicates stimulus
(Stim) artifact. Arrowhead indicates EPSP
onset. MP, Membrane potential; Phr,
phrenic nerve activity.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
Fig. 8.
Inhibition of an E-Aug neuron by stimulation (50 Hz, 0.8 × threshold; X stim) of the ipsilateral vagus
nerve at an intensity that had little effect on phrenic nerve activity.
Note progressive resumption of subthreshold modulation of membrane
potential (MP) during continued stimulation.
Phr, Phrenic nerve activity.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
Cranial motoneurons and bulbospinal neurons
A total of 36 motoneurons were activated antidromically by
stimulation of cranial nerves. Of these, 28 (E-Dec, 17; I-Aug, 10;
I-All, 1) were antidromically activated from the ipsilateral cervical
vagus nerve (latency, 1.2 ± 0.3 msec), 7 (latency, 0.9 ± 0.2 msec) from the pharyngeal branch of the vagus nerve, and 1 (I-Aug)
from the superior laryngeal nerve (latency, 1.2 msec). Two I-Aug
neurons and one E-Decearly neuron were activated
antidromically from the spinal cord (latencies: 1.2, 1.3, 1.5 msec).
Postsynaptic potentials in response to low-frequency stimulation of
the vagus nerve
Low-frequency stimulation of the ipsilateral vagus nerve elicited
PSPs in all classes of nonantidromically activated neurons except I-Dec
(n = 3) and E-Aug (n = 8; Table 1).
IPSPs had a relatively consistent latency (range, 4.4-5.0 msec) and
were evident chiefly in I-Aug neurons (Fig. 3) but also in some I-All
neurons (Table 1). EPSPs were divided into two groups on the basis of
their latencies. Short latency EPSPs (range, 2.2-3.4 msec;
n = 10) were observed in four E-Dec, four I-Aug, and
two I-All neurons. Longer latency EPSPs (range, 3.6-4.4 msec;
n = 19) were recorded mainly in E-Dec and
E-Decearly neurons (Figs. 4,
5; Table 1) but also in one I-Aug neuron. Short and
longer latency EPSPs were not observed in the same neuron. Stimulation
of the contralateral vagus nerve did not elicit detectable PSPs
(n = 15). In addition, PSPs were not evident in
antidromically identified cranial motoneurons (n = 17).
Effects of high-frequency vagus nerve stimulation on membrane
potential and discharge patterns of respiratory neurons
Vagal stimulation was performed at two intensities: (1) at the
threshold for producing a prolongation of E and (2) approximately three
times this threshold. The latter protocol elicited a cessation of
phrenic nerve discharge (neural apnea) lasting several seconds.
Inspiratory neurons
Stimulation of a vagus nerve at an intensity just above threshold
for prolonging expiration reduced the amplitude of the
inspiratory-related depolarization of I neurons (Fig. 6,
top). At higher stimulus intensities, phrenic nerve activity
was abolished, and there was a corresponding lack of phasic
depolarization of all I neurons (Fig. 6, bottom).
Expiratory neurons
The responses of E-Dec and E-Aug neurons to stimulation of the
vagus nerve were qualitatively different. In extracellular recordings
the activity of E-Dec neurons was prolonged by vagal stimulation,
whereas that of E-Aug neurons was readily abolished (data not shown).
Intracellular recordings revealed stimulus intensity-dependent changes
in the membrane potential and firing frequency in both populations of
neurons. In E-Dec neurons, stimulus intensities that modestly increased
the duration of expiration elicited an increase in discharge frequency
and a slight prolongation in the period of membrane depolarization
(Fig. 7, top). Increasing the stimulus
intensity (to 3 times threshold), caused the depolarization to be
maintained throughout the several seconds of vagus nerve stimulation
(Fig. 7, bottom). Two of five E-Decearly neurons
were tested for their response to vagus nerve stimulation. One
depolarized and discharged tonically during stimulation of the vagus,
but the second hyperpolarized. All E-Aug neurons ceased discharging
during vagal stimulation. In many of these neurons, even low-intensity
stimulation that had minimal effect on phrenic nerve activity reduced
or abolished the phasic changes in membrane potential (Fig.
8). However, during prolonged low-intensity vagal
stimulation, phasic subthreshold alterations in membrane potential
gradually reappeared (Fig. 8).
Effects of lung inflation on membrane trajectory and discharge
patterns of respiratory neurons
The effect of lung inflation to ~7.5 cm H2O was
determined in 33 neurons. Respiratory-related phasic depolarizations in
membrane potentials of I (I-All, n = 1; I-Aug,
n = 14) and E-Aug neurons (n = 1) were
reduced or abolished during lung inflation (Fig. 9).
E-Dec neurons exhibited two qualitatively different responses to lung
inflation. In 13 of 17 E-Dec neurons, the response to lung inflation
resembled that to vagus nerve stimulation, consisting of depolarization
and a prolonged discharge (Fig.
10A,B). The remaining four E-Dec
neurons were hyperpolarized during lung inflation.
Fig. 9.
Inhibition of an I-Aug neuron and phrenic nerve
activity during lung inflation in a rat with intact vagus nerves.
Tracheal pressure was maintained by turning the ventilator off near end
expiration. Irregular pattern of phrenic nerve activity during phasic
lung inflation is attributable to vagal afferent feedback.
MP, Membrane potential; Phr,
integrated phrenic nerve activity; PTr,
tracheal pressure.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
Figure 10 shows a comparison of the effects on one E-Dec neuron of lung
inflation and vagus and superior laryngeal nerve stimulation. During
maintained lung inflation (Fig. 10A), E periods were
prolonged, the rate of E-phase repolarization of the E-Dec neuron
slowed, and its period of discharge was prolonged. Both vagus and
superior laryngeal nerve stimulation similarly prolonged the E period,
depolarized the neuron, and even more markedly slowed its E-phase
repolarization (Fig. 10B,C). In addition, in the case
of superior laryngeal nerve stimulation, when the prolongation of
expiration exceeded the period of nerve stimulation (Fig.
10C), the E-Dec neuron remained depolarized, slowly
repolarizing until the next I phase. The sensitivity of the E-Dec
neuron to volume-related afferent input from the lung is indicated by
the depolarizing waves in the membrane potential traces (Fig.
10B,C) that correlate with the ventilator-induced
increases in tracheal pressure.
DISCUSSION
The findings are consistent with activation of a group of
propriobulbar E-Dec neurons having a key role in the BH reflex
prolongation of expiration. Low-frequency vagal stimulation induced a
short-latency EPSP in these neurons. Although EPSPs were also evoked in
several other groups of respiratory neurons, E-Dec neurons were unique
in that lung inflation and repetitive stimulation of a vagus nerve
caused prolonged depolarization and increased discharge only in this
group of neurons.
Firing patterns of respiratory neurons
The identified subgroups of respiratory neurons were similar
to those described in previous reports for the rat and included three
groups of I (I-Aug, I-Dec, and I-All) and two groups of E (E-Dec and
E-Aug) neurons (Ezure et al., 1988 ; Schwarzacher et al., 1991 ; Smith et
al., 1991b ; Zheng et al., 1991a ,b). An additional group of neurons
exhibiting a relatively constant discharge rate throughout E (E-Con
neurons; Zheng et al., 1991a ,b; Ezure et al., 1988 ) has been described
but was not observed in the present study.
As previously reported for the rat, E-Dec neurons formed the largest
group of E neurons (Ezure et al., 1988 ; Schwarzacher et al., 1991 ;
Zheng et al., 1991a ,b). It is likely that some of the E-Dec neurons
were cranial motoneurons but were not antidromically activated, because
only one or two cranial nerves were stimulated in each experiment.
Zheng et al. (1991b) found that 10 of the 11 E-Dec neurons that they
labeled with intracellular HRP were located proximal to the nucleus
ambiguus and had axonal trajectories indicating they were cranial
motoneurons. In the current study, most E-Dec neurons were depolarized
by lung inflation, which suggests that many of these cells may not be
cranial motoneurons, because lung inflation inhibits the expiratory
activity on cranial motoneurons, including those with axons in the
pharyngeal branch of the vagus nerve (Hayashi and McCrimmon, 1996 ).
This is consistent with previous reports of inhibition of laryngeal
motoneurons during lung inflation in both cats and rats (Barillot and
Bianchi, 1971 ; Bianchi and Barillot, 1975 ; Fukuda and Honda, 1982 ).
Postsynaptic potentials and the response to activation of
vagal afferents
Stimulation of a vagus nerve elicited PSPs in all groups of VRG
neurons except I-Dec (3 neurons tested) and E-Aug neurons (8 neurons
tested). In contrast, Parkes et al. (1994) found EPSPs in three E-Aug
neurons. This difference may be the result of a sampling bias, because
relatively few were tested in the present study. Alternatively, it may
be a function of the stimulus intensity used. The stimulus intensity in
relation to the threshold for evoking expiratory lengthening was not
described by Parkes et al. (1994) . If they used a higher intensity,
smaller diameter afferent fibers may have been activated that could
contribute the PSPs in E-Aug neurons.
EPSPs in the remaining groups readily could be divided into two groups
on the basis of their latency (2.8 ± 0.1 and 4.0 ± 0.1 msec). The shorter latency was comparable to that of 2.78 ± 0.17 msec in five E-Dec cells reported by Zheng et al. (1991b) and within
the range of <2-64 msec reported by Parkes et al. (1994) in the rat.
Calculation of the expected synaptic latency on the basis of a
disynaptic pathway with (1) a primary afferent fiber length of 30 mm
and a conduction velocity of 25 m/sec (Averill et al., 1984 ; Berger and
Dick, 1987 ), (2) second order neurons (presumably pump cells; Berger,
1977 ; Bonham and McCrimmon, 1990 ) with 3-mm-long axons conducting at 3 m/sec (Davies et al., 1987 ), and (3) two synaptic delays of 0.5 msec
each (Jiang and Lipski, 1990 ) would give a total latency of 3.2 msec.
Thus, at least the shorter latency EPSPs are likely to derive from a
pathway having no more than two synapses.
The presence of EPSPs in E-Dec neurons during low-frequency vagal
stimulation is consistent with the observed depolarization of these
neurons during lung inflation or electrical stimulation of a vagus
nerve. It is also consistent with a role for E-Decearly
neurons in the termination of inspiration (Feldman and Cohen, 1978 ;
Richter et al., 1986 , 1992 ; Lindsey et al., 1987 ; Ezure, 1990 ).
E-Decearly cells were the only recorded cells that
discharged early enough to account for the inspiratory-to-expiratory
phase transition. These cells may be similar to a recent description of
burst inspiratory-expiratory (bIE) neurons in cats (Oku et al., 1992 )
that fire a brief burst of action potentials coincident with the I to E
phase transition.
The prolongation of the E phase and coincident depolarization of many
E-Dec neurons during lung inflation (even during ventilator-mediated
tidal volumes, Fig. 10) as well as during stimulation of a vagus or
superior laryngeal nerve is generally consistent with the proposed role
of these neurons in the control of expiratory duration (Feldman and
Cohen, 1978 ; Richter et al., 1986 , 1992 ; Lindsey et al., 1989; Ezure,
1990 ; Ogilvie et al., 1992 ; Balis et al., 1994 ; Duffin et al., 1995 ).
Richter et al. (1986) modeled the respiratory cycle as consisting of
three phases, with expiration divided into an early (post-I) and a late
phase. In their model, a group of E-Dec neurons is identified (post-I
cells) that discharge only during the early E phase. They propose that
post-I neurons receive pulmonary afferent input and have the central
role in determining E duration. In the present study, the discharge
pattern of many of the E-Dec neurons excited by lung inflation was not
restricted to the post-I period, but these data do not allow us to rule
out a central role of post-I neurons in defining expiratory duration.
With respect to inspiratory termination, the finding that some E-Dec
neurons are excited by pulmonary afferents and begin to discharge
before inspiratory termination is consistent with proposals that E-Dec
neurons contribute to inspiratory termination (Feldman and Cohen, 1978 ;
Lindsey et al., 1989; Ezure, 1990 ). However, other models (Richter et
al., 1986 , 1992 ) have proposed that late-I neurons play a key role in
the I-E phase transition. Because no late-I neurons were recorded in
this study, their contribution cannot be ruled out. That some E-Dec
neurons are inhibited by lung inflation is consistent with the
observation that E activity on cranial nerves is inhibited by lung
inflation (i.e., superior laryngeal nerve and pharyngeal branch of the
vagus nerve; Hayashi and McCrimmon, 1996 ).
Activation of the BH reflex produces a bilaterally symmetrical
inhibition of phrenic nerve activity (Parkes et al., 1994 ; Hayashi and
McCrimmon, 1996 ). This implies that pulmonary stretch receptor
activation has a bilaterally equivalent effect on the discharge of VRG
neurons despite the observation that vagus nerve stimulation produced
EPSPs only in E-Dec neurons ipsilateral to the stimulated nerve. That
this coordination does not require connections between second order
neurons (probably pump cells) in the nucleus tractus solitarius is
suggested by preliminary studies in which interruption of pathways
connecting the left and right nucleus tractus solitarii did not
interrupt the BH reflex (Davies et al., 1987 ). Alternatively, E-Dec
neurons may provide the coordination. These cells have extensive
inhibitory connections with neurons in the contralateral VRG in cats
(Ezure and Manabe, 1988 ; Manabe and Ezure, 1988 ); thus, unilateral
activation of these neurons could cause bilateral changes in phrenic
nerve discharge.
The functional role of EPSPs in I neurons is less clear, but excitation
of VRG I neurons may contribute to a short latency excitation of
phrenic nerve that occurs during low-intensity vagus nerve stimulation
in rats (Hayashi and McCrimmon, 1996 ). In addition, electrical
stimulation of the vagus nerve is likely to activate afferent pathways
other than slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors, including
rapidly adapting receptor afferents. Activation of the latter afferents
can increase inspiratory efforts, at least in other species (Pack,
1981 ).
IPSPs were observed only in two groups of I neurons (I-Aug and I-All)
and were most common in I-Aug neurons. The latency averaged 4.8 msec
and was significantly longer (by an average of 0.8 msec) than the mean
of the longest latency EPSPs. This is consistent with the possibility
that E-Dec neurons in which EPSPs were observed have inhibitory
projections to these I neurons. It is also consistent with the proposed
role of these neurons in the control of I and E durations (Feldman and
Cohen, 1978 ; Richter et al., 1986 , 1992 ; Lindsey et al., 1989; Ezure,
1990 ; Duffin et al., 1995 ).
In summary, the current findings suggest that E-Dec neurons are
uniquely and paucisynaptically activated during the BH reflex
expiratory prolongation. These findings can be combined with those of
previous studies to propose a working model of the basic circuitry
producing the Breuer-Hering reflex prolongation of expiration. Slowly
adapting pulmonary stretch receptor fibers in the vagus nerve
monosynaptically activate a group of second order neurons (termed pump
cells) in the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (Berger and Dick, 1987 ;
Bonham and McCrimmon, 1990 ; Bonham et al., 1993 ). Pump cells then
activate E-Dec neurons, which synaptically inhibit other respiratory
neurons involved in rhythm generation, thereby prolonging expiration
(Feldman and Cohen, 1978 ; Richter et al., 1986 , 1992 ; Ezure, 1990 ;
Duffin et al., 1995 ).
FOOTNOTES
Received March 6, 1996; revised July 8, 1996; accepted July 25, 1996.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
HL-40336. S.K.C. was supported by National Institutes of
Health/National Research Service Award HL-08298. We thank Drs. John
Miller and Shaun Morrison for helpful comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Donald R. McCrimmon, Northwestern
University Medical School, Department of Physiology M211, 303 East
Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611-3008.
Dr. Hayashi's permanent address: Second Department of Physiology,
Chiba University, School of Medicine, Inohana 1-8-1, Chuo-ku, Chiba
City, Chiba 260, Japan.
Dr. Coles' permanent address: Department of Medicine, Division of
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University Hospitals, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-5067.
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