Impaired cardiorespiratory responses to hypercapnia in neonatal mice lacking PAC1 but not VPAC2 receptors

Author:

Barrett Karlene T.1,Hasan Shabih U.2ORCID,Scantlebury Morris H.3,Wilson Richard J. A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Hotchkiss Brain Institute and Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada

2. Department of Pediatrics, Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada

3. Department of Pediatrics, Clinical Neuroscience, Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Abstract

The evidence is mounting for a role for abnormal signaling of the stress peptide pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) and its canonical receptor PAC1 in the pathogenesis of sudden infant death syndrome. In this study, we investigated whether the PACAP receptors PAC1 or VPAC2 are involved in the neonatal cardiorespiratory response to hypercapnic stress. We used head-out plethysmography and surface ECG electrodes to assess cardiorespiratory responses to an 8% hypercapnic challenge in unanesthetized and spontaneously breathing 4-day-old PAC1 or VPAC2 knockout (KO) and wild-type mouse pups. We demonstrate that compared with WTs, breathing frequency (RR) and minute ventilation ([Formula: see text]) in PAC1 KO pups were significantly blunted in response to hypercapnia. Although heart rate was unaltered in PAC1 KO pups during hypercapnia, heart rate recovery posthypercapnia was impaired. In contrast, cardiorespiratory impairments in VPAC2 KO pups were limited to only an overall higher tidal volume (VT), independent of treatment. These findings suggest that PACAP signaling through the PAC1 receptor plays a more important role than signaling through the VPAC2 receptor in neonatal respiratory responses to hypercapnia. Thus deficits in PACAP signaling primarily via PAC1 may contribute to the inability of infants to mount an appropriate protective response to homeostatic stressors in childhood disorders such as SIDS.

Funder

SIDS Calgary Society

Gouvernement du Canada | CIHR | Institute of Health Services and Policy Research

Alberta Innovates - Health Solutions

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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