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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 2 February 2002, pp. 1057-1067
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama 930-0194, Japan
Haji, Akira,
Mari Okazaki,
Hiromi Yamazaki, and
Ryuji Takeda.
Physiological Properties of Late Inspiratory Neurons and Their
Possible Involvement in Inspiratory Off-Switching in Cats. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 1057-1067, 2002. To assess the functional significance of late inspiratory
(late-I) neurons in inspiratory off-switching (IOS), membrane potential and discharge properties were examined in vagotomized, decerebrate cats. During spontaneous IOS, late-I neurons displayed large membrane depolarization and associated discharge of action potentials that started in late inspiration, peaked at the end of inspiration, and
ended during postinspiration. Depolarization was decreased by
iontophoresis of dizocilpine and eliminated by tetrodotoxin. Stimulation of the vagus nerve or the nucleus parabrachialis medialis (NPBM) also evoked depolarization of late-I neurons and IOS. Waves of
spontaneous chloride-dependent inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) preceded membrane depolarization during early inspiration and
followed during postinspiration and stage 2 expiration of the
respiratory cycle. Iontophoresed bicuculline depressed the IPSPs.
Intravenous dizocilpine caused a greatly prolonged inspiratory discharge of the phrenic nerve (apneusis) and suppressed
late-inspiratory depolarization as well as early-inspiratory IPSPs,
resulting in a small constant depolarization throughout the apneusis.
NPBM or vagal stimulation after dizocilpine produced small,
stimulus-locked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in late-I
neurons. Neurobiotin-labeled late-I neurons revealed immunoreactivity
for glutamic acid decarboxylase as well as
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors. These
results suggest that late-I neurons are GABAergic inhibitory neurons,
while the effects of bicuculline and dizocilpine indicate that they
receive periodic waves of GABAergic IPSPs and glutamatergic EPSPs. The
data lead to the conclusion that late-I neurons play an important
inhibitory role in IOS. NMDA receptors are assumed to augment and/or
synchronize late-inspiratory depolarization and discharge of late-I
neurons, leading to GABA release and consequently off-switching of
bulbar inspiratory neurons and phrenic motoneurons.
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