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J Neurophysiol 95: 2070-2082, 2006. First published January 4, 2006; doi:10.1152/jn.01308.2005
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Norepinephrine Differentially Modulates Different Types of Respiratory Pacemaker and Nonpacemaker Neurons

Jean-Charles Viemari and Jan-Marino Ramirez

Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Submitted 13 December 2005; accepted in final form 30 December 2005

Pacemakers are found throughout the mammalian CNS. Yet, it remains largely unknown how these neurons contribute to network activity. Here we show that for the respiratory network isolated in transverse slices of mice, different functions can be assigned to different types of pacemakers and nonpacemakers. This difference becomes evident in response to norepinephrine (NE). Although NE depolarized 88% of synaptically isolated inspiratory neurons, this neuromodulator had differential effects on different neuron types. NE increased in cadmium-insensitive pacemakers burst frequency, not burst area and duration, and it increased in cadmium-sensitive pacemakers burst duration and area, but not frequency. NE also differentially modulated nonpacemakers. Two types of nonpacemakers were identified: "silent nonpacemakers" stop spiking, whereas "active nonpacemakers" spontaneously spike when isolated from the network. NE selectively induced cadmium-sensitive pacemaker properties in active, but not silent, nonpacemakers. Flufenamic acid (FFA), a blocker of ICAN, blocked the induction as well as modulation of cadmium-sensitive pacemaker activity, and blocked at the network level the NE-induced increase in burst area and duration of inspiratory network activity; the frequency modulation (FM) was unaffected. We therefore propose that modulation of cadmium-sensitive pacemaker activity contributes at the network level to changes in burst shape, not frequency. Riluzole blocked the FM of isolated cadmium-insensitive pacemakers. In the presence of riluzole, NE caused disorganized network activity, suggesting that cadmium-insensitive pacemakers are critical for rhythm generation. We conclude that different types of nonpacemaker and pacemaker neurons differentially control different aspects of the respiratory rhythm.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J.-C. Viemari, Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, The University of Chicago, 1027 East 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637 (E-mail: jcv{at}uchicago.edu)




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