Abstract

The sympathetic nervous system plays a critical role in regulating many autonomic functions, including cardiac rhythm. The postganglionic neurons in the sympathetic chain ganglia are essential components that relay sympathetic signals to target tissues and disruption of their activity leads to poor health outcomes. Despite this importance, the neurocircuitry within sympathetic ganglia is poorly understood. Canonically, postganglionic sympathetic neurons are thought to simply be activated by monosynaptic inputs from preganglionic cholinergic neurons of the intermediolateral cell columns of the spinal cord. Early electrophysiological studies of sympathetic ganglia where the peripheral nerve trunks were electrically stimulated identified excitatory cholinergic synaptic events in addition to retrograde action potentials, leading some to speculate that excitatory collateral projections are present. However, this seemed unlikely since sympathetic postganglionic neurons were known to synthesize and release norepinephrine and expression of dual neurochemical phenotypes had not been well recognized. In vitro studies clearly established the capacity of cultured sympathetic neurons to express and release acetylcholine and norepinephrine throughout development and even in pathophysiological conditions. Given this insight, we believe that the canonical view of ganglionic transmission needs to be reevaluated and may provide a mechanistic understanding of autonomic imbalance in disease. Further studies likely will require genetic models manipulating neurochemical phenotypes within sympathetic ganglia to resolve the function of cholinergic collateral projections between postganglionic neurons. In this perspective article, we will discuss the evidence for collateral projections in sympathetic ganglia, determine if current laboratory techniques could address these questions, and discuss potential obstacles and caveats.

Highlights

  • Technical advances have long driven new insights into the mechanistic basis of neurophysiology

  • It seemed unlikely at the time, our current understanding of dual neurochemical phenotypes in sympathetic neurons has persuaded us that further studies are needed to investigate the potential presence of cholinergic collateral projections between postganglionic neurons in sympathetic ganglia

  • While some of the first studies investigating sympathetic nerve impulses proposed that collateral projections may be present in the sympathetic ganglia, this model was dismissed because of our incomplete understanding of dual neurochemical phenotypes

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Technical advances have long driven new insights into the mechanistic basis of neurophysiology. Dye tracing and electrical activity recordings indicate that such afferent neurons arise from the dorsal root ganglia and traverse peripheral sympathetic ganglia to their visceral targets [34] It seemed unlikely at the time, our current understanding of dual neurochemical phenotypes in sympathetic neurons has persuaded us that further studies are needed to investigate the potential presence of cholinergic collateral projections between postganglionic neurons in sympathetic ganglia. Studies hypothesized that single spikes in recordings of cardiac sympathetic nerve activity represent synchronized activity of multiple postganglionic neurons [75], but the potential role of collateral synapses in this synchronization is purely speculative It was not possible in the past to distinguish preganglionic cholinergic transmission from putative post-ganglionic collateral projections, but transgenic mouse models and genetic tools provide the means to address this issue now. If cholinergic collaterals are an important aspect of transmission by post-ganglionic sympathetic neurons we would expect them to be present and detectable throughout the sympathetic chain, and lead to changes in transmission to target tissues

DISCUSSION
Findings
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call