PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Aurore Giraudin AU - Morgane Le Bon-Jégo AU - Marie-Jeanne Cabirol AU - John Simmers AU - Didier Morin TI - Spinal and Pontine Relay Pathways Mediating Respiratory Rhythm Entrainment by Limb Proprioceptive Inputs in the Neonatal Rat AID - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0360-12.2012 DP - 2012 Aug 22 TA - The Journal of Neuroscience PG - 11841--11853 VI - 32 IP - 34 4099 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/34/11841.short 4100 - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/34/11841.full SO - J. Neurosci.2012 Aug 22; 32 AB - The coordination of locomotion and respiration is widespread among mammals, although the underlying neural mechanisms are still only partially understood. It was previously found in neonatal rat that cyclic electrical stimulation of spinal cervical and lumbar dorsal roots (DRs) can fully entrain (1:1 coupling) spontaneous respiratory activity expressed by the isolated brainstem/spinal cord. Here, we used a variety of preparations to determine the type of spinal sensory inputs responsible for this respiratory rhythm entrainment, and to establish the extent to which limb movement-activated feedback influences the medullary respiratory networks via direct or relayed ascending pathways. During in vivo overground locomotion, respiratory rhythm slowed and became coupled 1:1 with locomotion. In hindlimb-attached semi-isolated preparations, passive flexion–extension movements applied to a single hindlimb led to entrainment of fictive respiratory rhythmicity recorded in phrenic motoneurons, indicating that the recruitment of limb proprioceptive afferents could participate in the locomotor-respiratory coupling. Furthermore, in correspondence with the regionalization of spinal locomotor rhythm-generating circuitry, the stimulation of DRs at different segmental levels in isolated preparations revealed that cervical and lumbosacral proprioceptive inputs are more effective in this entraining influence than thoracic afferent pathways. Finally, blocking spinal synaptic transmission and using a combination of electrophysiology, calcium imaging and specific brainstem lesioning indicated that the ascending entraining signals from the cervical or lumbar limb afferents are transmitted across first-order synapses, probably monosynaptic, in the spinal cord. They are then conveyed to the brainstem respiratory centers via a brainstem pontine relay located in the parabrachial/Kölliker-Fuse nuclear complex.