Journal of Applied Physiology AJP: Renal Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 106: 138-152, 2009. First published October 30, 2008; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.91125.2008
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Neural circuits controlling diaphragm function in the cat revealed by transneuronal tracing

James H. Lois,1 Cory D. Rice,2 and Bill J. Yates1,2

Departments of 1Neuroscience and 2Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Submitted 18 August 2008 ; accepted in final form 27 October 2008

Although a number of studies have considered the neural circuitry that regulates diaphragm activity, these pathways have not been adequately discerned, particularly in animals such as cats that utilize the respiratory muscles during a variety of different behaviors and movements. The present study employed the retrograde transneuronal transport of rabies virus to identify the extended neural pathways that control diaphragm function in felines. In all animals deemed to have successful rabies virus injections into the diaphragm, large, presumed motoneurons were infected in the C4–C6 spinal segments. In addition, smaller presumed interneurons were labeled bilaterally throughout the cervical and upper thoracic spinal cord. While in short and intermediate survival cases, infected interneurons were concentrated in the vicinity of phrenic motoneurons, in late survival cases, the distribution of labeling was more expansive. Within the brain stem, the earliest infected neurons included those located in the classically defined pontine and medullary respiratory groups, the medial and lateral medullary reticular formation, the region immediately ventral to the spinal trigeminal nucleus, raphe pallidus and obscurus, and the vestibular nuclei. At longer survival times, infection appeared in the midbrain, which was concentrated in the lateral portion of the periaqueductal gray, the region of the tegmentum that contains the locomotion center, and the red nucleus. Considerable labeling was also present in the fastigial nucleus of the cerebellum, portions of the posterior and lateral hypothalamus and the adjacent fields of Forel known to contain hypocretin-containing neurons and the precruciate gyrus of cerebral cortex. These data raise the possibility that several parallel pathways participate in regulating the activity of the feline diaphragm, which underscores the multifunctional nature of the respiratory muscles in this species.

respiration; rabies virus; motor control; reticular formation



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: B. J. Yates, Dept. of Otolaryngology, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Eye and Ear Institute, Rm. 519, 203 Lothrop St., Pittsburgh, PA 15213 (e-mail: byates{at}pitt.edu)




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