Graded reductions in oxygenation evoke graded reconfiguration of the isolated respiratory network

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-1-2011

Abstract

Neurons depend on aerobic metabolism, yet are very sensitive to oxidative stress and, as a consequence, typically operate in a low O2 environment. The balance between blood flow and metabolic activity, both of which can vary spatially and dynamically, suggests that local O2 availability markedly influences network output. Yet the understanding of the underlying O2-sensing mechanisms is limited. Are network responses regulated by discrete O2-sensing mechanisms or, rather, are they the consequence of inherent O2 sensitivities of mechanisms that generate the network activity? We hypothesized that a broad range of O2 tensions progressively modulates network activity of the pre-Bötzinger complex (preBötC), a neuronal network critical to the central control of breathing. Rhythmogenesis was measured from the preBötC in transverse neonatal mouse brain stem slices that were exposed to graded reductions in O2 between 0 and 95% O2, producing tissue oxygenation values ranging from 20 ± 18 (mean ± SE) to 440 ± 56 Torr at the slice surface, respectively. The response of the preBötC to graded changes in O2 is progressive for some metrics and abrupt for others, suggesting that different aspects of the respiratory network have different sensitivities to O2. Copyright © 2011 The American Physiological Society.

Identifier

79951828055 (Scopus)

Publication Title

Journal of Neurophysiology

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00237.2010

e-ISSN

15221598

ISSN

00223077

PubMed ID

21084689

First Page

625

Last Page

639

Issue

2

Volume

105

Grant

R01HL107084

Fund Ref

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

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