Literature DB >> 19828803

Convergence of cranial visceral afferents within the solitary tract nucleus.

Stuart J McDougall1, James H Peters, Michael C Andresen.   

Abstract

Primary afferent axons within the solitary tract (ST) relay homeostatic information via glutamatergic synapses directly to second-order neurons within the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). These primary afferents arise from multiple organ systems and relay multiple sensory modalities. How this compact network organizes the flow of primary afferent information will shape central homeostatic control. To assess afferent convergence and divergence, we recorded ST-evoked synaptic responses in pairs of medial NTS neurons in horizontal brainstem slices. ST shocks activated EPSCs along monosynaptic or polysynaptic pathways. Gradations in shock intensity discriminated multiple inputs and stimulus recruitment profiles indicated that each EPSC was unitary. In 24 pairs, 75% were second-order neurons with 64% receiving one direct ST input with the remainder receiving additional convergent ST afferent inputs (22% two; 14% three monosynaptic ST-EPSCs). Some (34%) second-order neurons received polysynaptic EPSCs. Neurons receiving only higher-order inputs were uncommon (13%). Most ST-EPSCs were completely independent, but 4 EPSCs of a total of 81 had equal thresholds, highly correlated latencies, and synchronized synaptic failures consistent with divergence from a single source ST axon or from a common interneuron producing a pair of polysynaptic EPSCs. We conclude that ST afferent inputs are remarkably independent with little evidence of substantial shared information. Individual cells receive highly focused information from the viscera. Thus, afferent excitation of second-order NTS neurons is generally dominated by single visceral afferents and therefore focused on a single afferent modality and/or organ region.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19828803      PMCID: PMC2797442          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3491-09.2009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  37 in total

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Authors:  James H Peters; Stuart J McDougall; Daniel O Kellett; David Jordan; Ida J Llewellyn-Smith; Michael C Andresen
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  30 in total

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Review 3.  The unsilent majority-TRPV1 drives "spontaneous" transmission of unmyelinated primary afferents within cardiorespiratory NTS.

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4.  Independent transmission of convergent visceral primary afferents in the solitary tract nucleus.

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5.  Low-fidelity GABA transmission within a dense excitatory network of the solitary tract nucleus.

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Review 6.  Vagal Afferent Innervation of the Airways in Health and Disease.

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7.  Heterosynaptic crosstalk: GABA-glutamate metabotropic receptors interactively control glutamate release in solitary tract nucleus.

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8.  Distinct target cell-dependent forms of short-term plasticity of the central visceral afferent synapses of the rat.

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9.  Optical tracking of phenotypically diverse individual synapses on solitary tract nucleus neurons.

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10.  Effects of high-fat diet and gastric bypass on neurons in the caudal solitary nucleus.

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