Midcervical neuronal discharge patterns during and following hypoxia

Author:

Sandhu M. S.1,Baekey D. M.2,Maling N. G.3,Sanchez J. C.4,Reier P. J.3,Fuller D. D.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Therapy, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida;

2. Department of Physiological Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; and

3. Department of Neuroscience, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida;

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Miami, Miami, Florida

Abstract

Anatomical evidence indicates that midcervical interneurons can be synaptically coupled with phrenic motoneurons. Accordingly, we hypothesized that interneurons in the C3–C4 spinal cord can display discharge patterns temporally linked with inspiratory phrenic motor output. Anesthetized adult rats were studied before, during, and after a 4-min bout of moderate hypoxia. Neuronal discharge in C3–C4 lamina I–IX was monitored using a multielectrode array while phrenic nerve activity was extracellularly recorded. For the majority of cells, spike-triggered averaging (STA) of ipsilateral inspiratory phrenic nerve activity based on neuronal discharge provided no evidence of discharge synchrony. However, a distinct STA phrenic peak with a 6.83 ± 1.1 ms lag was present for 5% of neurons, a result that indicates a monosynaptic connection with phrenic motoneurons. The majority (93%) of neurons changed discharge rate during hypoxia, and the diverse responses included both increased and decreased firing. Hypoxia did not change the incidence of STA peaks in the phrenic nerve signal. Following hypoxia, 40% of neurons continued to discharge at rates above prehypoxia values (i.e., short-term potentiation, STP), and cells with initially low discharge rates were more likely to show STP ( P < 0.001). We conclude that a population of nonphrenic C3–C4 neurons in the rat spinal cord is synaptically coupled to the phrenic motoneuron pool, and these cells can modulate inspiratory phrenic output. In addition, the C3–C4 propriospinal network shows a robust and complex pattern of activation both during and following an acute bout of hypoxia.

Funder

NIH

Craig H. Neilsen Foundation

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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