Abstract

Opioids profoundly depress breathing which can be fatal in the case of overdose. Despite growing knowledge of the pontine and medullary respiratory control circuits that are inhibited by opioids, the circuit and cellular mechanisms of opioid induced respiratory depression are not fully understood. Serotonin neurons located in the caudal medullary raphe modulate breathing and possess mu opioid receptors. Therefore, we hypothesized that serotonin-producing raphe neurons contribute to opioid induced respiratory depression. To test this, we employed to experimental approaches: 1) arterially perfused in situ working heart brainstem preparations and 2) ex vivo acute brain slice electrophysiology to identify and characterize serotonin neuron inputs onto brainstem respiratory neurons. To specifically activate serotonin neurons, we used ePet-Cre::Ai32 mice which Cre-dependently express channelrhodopsin-2, a light-activated cation channel, in serotonin neurons. At the circuit level, using the in situ preparation, we found that activation of caudal medullary raphe serotonin neurons increased respiratory rate by decreasing inspiratory and expiratory duration. Fentanyl application blocked the respiratory effects induced by serotonin neuron activation which were subsequently restored using naloxone. These results suggest serotonin neurons in the caudal medullary raphe are inhibited by opioids. To characterize the serotonin-mediated mechanisms at the cellular level, we made acute brain slices containing dorsal raphe neurons and lateral parabrachial neurons from ePet-Cre::Ai32 mice. We verified that optical stimulation resulted in action potentials and serotonin release from dorsal raphe serotonin neurons. Optically evoked serotonin release caused 5HT1A receptor-mediated outward currents in dorsal raphe serotonin neurons. To locate and characterize serotonin neuron inputs onto lateral parabrachial neurons, we performed whole-cell voltage clamp recordings from lateral parabrachial neurons and delivered paired light pulses (10 ms duration, 50 ms interval). We observed optically evoked inhibitory post-synaptic currents (IPSCs) that were blocked by the GABA-A receptor antagonist gabazine (1 μM). Optically evoked IPSCs had long latency (> 5 ms) and high jitter (> 1 ms), indicating stimulation of serotonin terminals resulted in polysynaptic GABA release onto lateral parabrachial neurons. Future work will examine the influence of opioids on this raphe-parabrachial circuit. Uncovering the role of serotonin neurons in opioid induced respiratory depression may reveal targets for restoring breathing in the presence of opioids or other conditions where life-threatening apneas occur. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIDA) R01DA047978-05 grant to ESL. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.

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