Abstract

A dramatic bradycardia is induced by underwater submersion in vertebrates. The location of parasympathetic preganglionic cardiac motor neurons driving this aspect of the diving response was investigated using cFos immunohistochemistry combined with retrograde transport of cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) to double-label neurons. After pericardial injections of CTB, trained rats voluntarily dove underwater, and their heart rates (HR) dropped immediately to 95 ± 2 bpm, an 80% reduction. After immunohistochemical processing, the vast majority of CTB labeled neurons were located in the reticular formation from the rostral cervical spinal cord to the facial motor nucleus, confirming previous studies. Labeled neurons caudal to the rostral ventrolateral medulla were usually spindle-shaped aligned along an oblique line running from the dorsal vagal nucleus to the ventrolateral reticular formation, while those more rostrally were multipolar with extended dendrites. Nine percent of retrogradely-labeled neurons were positive for both cFos and CTB after diving and 74% of these were found rostral to the obex. CTB also was transported transganglionically in primary afferent fibers, resulting in large granular deposits in dorsolateral, ventrolateral, and commissural subnuclei of the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) and finer deposits in lamina I and IV-V of the trigeminocervical complex. The overlap of parasympathetic preganglionic cardiac motor neurons activated by diving with those activated by baro- and chemoreceptors in the rostral ventrolateral medulla is discussed. Thus, the profound bradycardia seen with underwater submersion reinforces the notion that the mammalian diving response is the most powerful autonomic reflex known.

Highlights

  • Motor control of the heart is via a two neuron efferent system linked in a peripheral ganglion

  • The consensus for the location of preganglionic cardiac motoneurons has shifted over the years, with most investigators concluding that most cardiac motoneurons are found in the external formation of the nucleus ambiguus in the ventrolateral medulla

  • We show that most cardiac motoneurons physiologically-activated by diving and showing cFos were found in the rostral ventrolateral medulla

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Summary

Introduction

Motor control of the heart is via a two neuron efferent system linked in a peripheral ganglion. The consensus for the location of preganglionic cardiac motoneurons has shifted over the years (see Hopkins et al, 1996; Panneton et al, 1996; Hopkins and Armour, 1998; Hsieh et al, 1998 for reviews), with most investigators concluding that most cardiac motoneurons are found in the external formation of the nucleus ambiguus in the ventrolateral medulla. Axons from these neurons travel peripherally with the vagus nerve; a bradycardia is induced when such fibers are activated. A functional heterogeneity has been speculated (see Blinder et al, 2007) for preganglionic parasympathetic cardiac motor neurons; we wished to determine if medullary cardiac motor neurons physiologically-activated by diving underwater are segregated in the medulla

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