Role of the retrotrapezoid nucleus/parafacial respiratory group in coughing and swallowing in guinea pigs

Author:

Sugiyama Yoichiro1,Shiba Keisuke2,Mukudai Shigeyuki3,Umezaki Toshiro4,Sakaguchi Hirofumi1,Hisa Yasuo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan;

2. Hikifune Otolaryngology Clinic, Sumida, Tokyo, Japan;

3. Department of Otolaryngology, Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daini Hospital, Kyoto, Japan; and

4. Department of Otolaryngology, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

Abstract

The retrotrapezoid/parafacial respiratory group (RTN/pFRG) located ventral to the facial nucleus plays a key role in regulating breathing, especially enhanced expiratory activity during hypercapnic conditions. To clarify the roles of the RTN/pFRG region in evoking coughing, during which reflexive enhanced expiration is produced, and in swallowing, during which the expiratory activity is consistently halted, we recorded extracellular activity from RTN/pFRG neurons during these fictive behaviors in decerebrate, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated guinea pigs. The activity of the majority of recorded respiratory neurons was changed in synchrony with coughing and swallowing. To further evaluate the contribution of RTN/pFRG neurons to these nonrespiratory behaviors, the motor output patterns during breathing, coughing, and swallowing were compared before and after brain stem transection at the caudal margin of RTN/pFRG region. In addition, the effects of transection at its rostral margin were also investigated to evaluate pontine contribution to these behaviors. During respiration, transection at the rostral margin attenuated the postinspiratory activity of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. Meanwhile, the late expiratory activity of the abdominal nerve was abolished after caudal transection. The caudal transection also decreased the amplitude of the coughing-related abdominal nerve discharge but did not abolish the activity. Swallowing could be elicited even after the caudal end transection. These findings raise the prospect that the RTN/pFRG contributes to expiratory regulation during normal respiration, although this region is not an essential element of the neuronal networks involved in coughing and swallowing.

Funder

Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists [Japan]

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research [Japan]

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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