Abstract

The respiratory rhythm is generated by the interaction of oscillators disparately distributed throughout the pons, medulla, and spinal cord. According to the classic model, the interaction amongst preBötzinger complex (preBötzC) spontaneously bursting preinspiratory units and Bötzinger complex (BötzC) expiratory cells generates the principal respiratory rhythm, thence relayed caudally to the pattern generating elements and premotoneurons of the rostral and caudal divisions of the ventral respiratory group and bulbospinal units of the dorsal respiratory group. Rhythm and pattern generating elements in the ventrolateral medulla receive powerful phasic and tonic modulatory inputs from diencephalic structures, midbrain, Kölliker-Fuse, and parabrachial nuclei, retrotrapezoid nucleus, parafacial respiratory group, ventrolateral metencephalon, nucleus tractus solitarius, and brainstem reticular formation, collectively shaping the normal eupneic discharge. Empirical and computational studies have generated models of respiratory rhythmogenesis and pattern formation variously predicated upon pacemaker, network, or hybrid pacemaker network mechanisms to explain oscillatory behavior and regularity. Network mechanisms critically require the integrity and functionality of inhibitory synaptic neurotransmission. The operation and contribution of inhibitory elements in respiratory rhythm generation and pattern formation are well demonstrated empirically and incorporated in computational network and hybrid models of breathing. Fast inhibitory synaptic neurotransmission utilizes GABAAergic and glycinergic mediated activation of receptor linked chloride conductances, generating an inwardly directed flux of chloride ions mediating membrane voltage hyperpolarization and is required to generate eupneic respiratory patterns in vivo and situ. Persistence of rhythmicity in the presence of synaptic antagonism of GABAA and glycine receptor mediated fast inhibitory neurotransmission indicates pacemaker generating mechanisms sufficiently capable of independently generating this behavior in vivo and transected intact preparations maintaining the preBötzC as the most rostrally preserved structure. The role of GABAB receptor mediated neuromodulation in respiratory rhythm generation and pattern formation is comparatively significantly less investigated. GABABergic activation of postsynaptic and presynaptic membrane receptors variably upregulates potassium conductances and downregulates calcium conductances. Respiratory rhythm and pattern are powerfully modulated in vivo, in situ, and in vitro by superfusion or localized microinjections of GABABergic agonists and antagonists, though are typically not abolished by these experimental interventions. Directionality and magnitude of these effects exhibit maturational changes. The relative depolarization of chloride reversal potentials during the early neonatal period, with gradual shifts towards normal hyperpolarizing values during development, suggests GABABergic signaling may mediate the inhibitory neurotransmission necessary to generate triphasic eupnea. We review and discuss the role of spontaneously bursting oscillators and network mechanisms predicating upon fast inhibitory synaptic neurotransmission in contributing to respiratory rhythmogenesis and pattern formation.

Highlights

  • IntroductionTriphasic eupnea consists of neural inspiratory (I), postinspiratory (post-I), and late expiratory (late-E) phases, as characterized by the pioneering works of Richter and colleagues (Richter et al, 1986), a definition having withstood the test of time for the past several decades (Anderson and Ramirez, 2017; Garcia et al, 2019; Morgado-Valle and Beltran-Parrazal, 2017; Ramirez and Baertsch, 2019)

  • Breathing sustains normal gas exchange and life

  • The rostral ventrolateral medullary presympathetic units providing the bulbospinal drive to sympathetic preganglionic neurons interestingly exhibit glucosensitive membrane voltage properties. These findings collectively indicate the existence of a complex network mechanism regulating glucosemediated changes in sympathetic and parasympathetic outflows, powerfully influenced by fast inhibitory GABAAergic synaptic neurotransmission and slow inhibitory GABABergic synaptic neuromodulation

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Summary

Introduction

Triphasic eupnea consists of neural inspiratory (I), postinspiratory (post-I), and late expiratory (late-E) phases, as characterized by the pioneering works of Richter and colleagues (Richter et al, 1986), a definition having withstood the test of time for the past several decades (Anderson and Ramirez, 2017; Garcia et al, 2019; Morgado-Valle and Beltran-Parrazal, 2017; Ramirez and Baertsch, 2019). Respiratory rhythm generation represents bursting regularity, and pattern formation represents the coordinated spatiotemporal organization of inspiratory, post-inspiratory, and expiratory neural output effector mechanisms. Genesis of consistently reproducible rhythmic activity and an organized pattern coordinating inspiratory and expiratory motor outputs, responsiveness to lung stretch and hypercapnic and hypoxic chemosensory demands, integration of neural respiratory output with sympathetic and parasympathetic outflows, integration with the behavioral demands of the animal, and coordination with other rhythmic activities (Molkov et al, 2017)

Respiratory rhythm generating circuitry
Pacemaker models of respiratory rhythm generation and pattern formation
On the nature of the preBötzC pacemaker mechanism
Modeling preBötzC rhythmic bursting
Network models of respiratory rhythm generation and pattern formation
GABAAergic and GABABergic biomolecular machinery
GABAA and GABAB receptor structure
GABAA and GABAB receptor localization
10. GABAA and GABAB receptor mediated intracellular signal transduction
11. GABAAergic and GABABergic neurochemical electrophysiology
12. GABABergic modulated potassium conductances
13. GABABergic modulated calcium conductances
15. GABAB neuromodulation of respiratory output: in vitro and situ studies
17. GABAB receptor mediated modulation of cough reflexes
18. GABAAergic signaling in neonatal respiratory rhythmogenesis
19. Maturation of GABAAergic neurotransmission
20. GABABergic signaling in neonatal respiratory rhythmogenesis
21. Developmental maturation of GABABergic synaptic neuromodulation
23. On the genesis and origins of motor activity in neurobiological networks
24. On the genesis and origins of gasping in neurobiological networks
25. Perspectives and Significance
26. Conclusions
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