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1 Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee 53295; 2 Department of Anesthesiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53226; and 3 Department of Physiology and Institute for Neuroscience, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611
The relative contribution of phasic
and tonic excitatory synaptic drives to the augmenting discharge
patterns of inspiratory (I) neurons within the ventral respiratory
group (VRG) was studied in anesthetized, ventilated, paralyzed, and
vagotomized dogs. Multibarrel micropipettes were used to record
simultaneously single-unit neuronal activity and pressure
microejected antagonists of GABAergic, glycinergic,
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA
glutamatergic, and cholinergic receptors. The discharge patterns were
quantified via cycle-trigger histograms. The findings suggest that
two-thirds of the excitatory drive to caudal VRG I neurons is tonic and
mediated by NMDA receptors and the other third is ramp-like phasic and mediated by non-NMDA receptors. Cholinergic receptors do not appear to
be involved. The silent expiratory phase is produced by phasic inhibition of the tonic activity, and
80% of this inhibition is
mediated by
-aminobutyric acid receptors (GABAA) and
20% by glycine receptors. Phasic I inhibition by the I decrementing neurons does not appear to contribute to the predominantly step-ramp patterns of these I neurons. However, this decrementing inhibition may
be very prominent in controlling the rate of augmentation in late-onset
I neurons and those with ramp patterns lacking the step component.
control of breathing; central pattern generation; neurotransmitters;
-aminobutyric acid receptors; glutamatergic
receptors
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