Abstract

We investigated whether a monosynaptic connection from the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) or the depressor ventrolateral medulla (VLM) to the pressor region of the rostral VLM (RVLM) constituted part of the reflex pathway activated by cardiopulmonary baroreceptors. Volume expansion in the conscious rabbit, which elicits renal nerve inhibition predominantly via cardiac mechanoreceptors, was used as the stimulus. The protein Fos was used as a marker of neuronal activation. The retrogradely transported tracer rhodamine-tagged microspheres, previously injected into the pressor region of the RVLM, identified medullary neurons that projected to that region. Volume expansion significantly increased the number of Fos-positive cell nuclei in the NTS and in the depressor VLM. Neurons that projected to the RVLM were found throughout the depressor region of the VLM and in the NTS but were not activated by volume expansion. Thus, although the central reflex pathways activated by volume expansion include the NTS and the depressor region of the VLM, we could not find evidence for a monosynaptic connection between those regions and the RVLM.

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