Artigo Revisado por pares

Ventilatory effects of glial dysfunction in a rat brain stem chemoreceptor region

1998; American Physiological Society; Volume: 85; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1152/jappl.1998.85.5.1599

ISSN

8750-7587

Autores

Joseph S. Erlichman, Aihua Li, Eugene Nattie,

Tópico(s)

Neuroscience of respiration and sleep

Resumo

Glia are thought to be important in brain extracellular fluid ion and pH regulation, but their role in brain stem sites that sense pH and stimulate breathing is unknown. Using a diffusion pipette, we administered the glial toxin, fluorocitrate (FC; 1 mM) into one such brain stem region, the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) for 45–60 min. This dose and time period were chosen so that the effects of FC would be largely reversible. Within minutes, tissue pH decreased, and respiratory output increased. Both recovered almost completely after cessation of FC administration. The response to systemic CO 2 stimulation was unaffected by FC treatment compared with that following control diffusion. Anatomic analysis showed, at the center of FC administration, some small (mean diameter = 5.1 μm) cells that stained for DEAD Red, a marker for altered cell membrane permeability, and some fragmented glia (glial fibrillary acidic protein immunohistochemistry). The average RTN tissue volume that contained such DEAD Red-positive cells was 271 nl, ∼23% of the volume of one RTN region. Reversible disruption of glia in the RTN, a region known to contain central chemoreception, results in an acidic local pH and in stimulation of respiratory output.

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