Youichirou Ootsuka1, Mutsumi Tanaka2. 1. Centre for Neuroscience; Department of Human Physiology; School of Medicine; Flinders University; Bedford Park; South Australia, Australia; Department of Physiology; Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences; Kagoshima University; Kagoshima, Japan. 2. Health Effects Research Group; Energy and Environment Research Division; Japan Automobile Research Institute ; Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
Abstract
Hairless skin acts as a heat exchanger between body and environment, and thus greatly contributes to body temperature regulation by changing blood flow to the skin (cutaneous) vascular bed during physiological responses such as cold- or warm-defense and fever. Cutaneous blood flow is also affected by alerting state; we 'go pale with fright'. The rabbit ear pinna and the rat tail have hairless skin, and thus provide animal models for investigating central pathway regulating blood flow to cutaneous vascular beds. Cutaneous blood flow is controlled by the centrally regulated sympathetic nervous system. Sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé in the lower brain stem are labeled at early stage after injection of trans-synaptic viral tracer into skin wall of the rat tail. Inactivation of these neurons abolishes cutaneous vasomotor changes evoked as part of thermoregulatory, febrile or psychological responses, indicating that the medullary raphé is a common final pathway to cutaneous sympathetic outflow, receiving neural inputs from upstream nuclei such as the preoptic area, hypothalamic nuclei and the midbrain. Summarizing evidences from rats and rabbits studies in the last 2 decades, we will review our current understanding of the central pathways mediating cutaneous vasomotor control.
Hairless skin acts as a heat exchanger between body and environment, and thus greatly contributes to body temperature regulation by changing blood flow to the skin (cutaneous) vascular bed during physiological responses such as cold- or warm-defense and fever. Cutaneous blood flow is also affected by alerting state; we 'go pale with fright'. The rabbit ear pinna and the rat tail have hairless skin, and thus provide animal models for investigating central pathway regulating blood flow to cutaneous vascular beds. Cutaneous blood flow is controlled by the centrally regulated sympathetic nervous system. Sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé in the lower brain stem are labeled at early stage after injection of trans-synaptic viral tracer into skin wall of the rat tail. Inactivation of these neurons abolishes cutaneous vasomotor changes evoked as part of thermoregulatory, febrile or psychological responses, indicating that the medullary raphé is a common final pathway to cutaneous sympathetic outflow, receiving neural inputs from upstream nuclei such as the preoptic area, hypothalamic nuclei and the midbrain. Summarizing evidences from rats and rabbits studies in the last 2 decades, we will review our current understanding of the central pathways mediating cutaneous vasomotor control.
The skin acts as a protective barrier between the body and the external environment. The skin, especially hairless (glabrous) skin, also functions as a variable capacity heat exchanger. Regulating blood flow to the glabrous skin is an important mechanism determining heat exchanges between the body and the environment, and thus contributes to thermoregulation, while the primary function of the cutaneous vascular bed is to supply substances to the skin itself. Increasing blood flow to the skin by cutaneous vasodilatation enhances heat dissipation from the skin surface, a part of the heat-defense response. Decreasing skin blood flow by cutaneous vasoconstriction greatly contributes to accumulation of central core heat, as a part of the cold-defense response or of the fever response. Cutaneous vasoconstriction also occurs, when the individual is aroused, especially under aversive situation.Thermo-receptors in the skin are part of the thermoregulatory system. Nakamaura and Morrison recently discovered thermal afferent pathways that convey temperature signals from the periphery to the thermoregulatory center in the preoptic area (For a review see refs.), focusing on thermogenesis as an index of thermoregulatory response. The same afferent pathways are involved in thermoregulatory cutaneous vasomotor responses.The cutaneous vascular bed is dilated and constricted by hormonal and neural control. In response to acute thermoregulatory or aversive events such as cold exposure or sudden exposure to alerting stimuli, neural influence is predominant. Arteriovenous anastomoses (AVAs) play an important role in cutaneous blood flow regulation. Dilating AVAs provides low-resistance bypasses, which increase cutaneous vascular volume and thus deliver more blood to the skin. The AVAs are abundant in the glabrous skin, and are densely innervated by sympathetic nerve fibers. The sympathetic nerve terminals release noradrenaline, and the noradrenaline binds α-adrenergic receptors on cutaneous vascular smooth muscle resulting in cutaneous vasoconstriction. Functional studies show that cutaneous blood flow is regulated by sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves. There is no consensus about the presence of a sympathetic vasodilator innervation in laboratory animals. Thus this review focuses only on cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic outflow.The rabbit ear pinna and the rat tail have hairless skin that can act as a heat exchanger, and thus these animals have provided important animal models for investigating central pathway regulating blood flow to thermoregulatory cutaneous vascular beds. In the last 2 decades, extensive investigations have identified central nuclei and neural pathways that are involved in cutaneous vasomotor control (). The first approach was to find out possible nuclei for cutaneous vasomotor control by investigating the effect of stimulating various brain regions on basal cutaneous vasomotor activity. Then, the involvement of each nucleus in cutaneous vasomotor changes elicited physiologically was investigated. Cutaneous vasomotor responses are elicited by cold/heat exposure (thermoregulatory response), pyrogenic substance (fever response) or by salient/alerting stimuli (psychological response). With these experimental approaches, the most well investigated nuclei are 1) the raphé/parapyramidal region of the rostral medulla oblongata (the medullary raphé) that contains sympathetic premotor neurons controlling cutaneous vasomotor activity, and 2) the preoptic area that plays a key role for the thermoregulatory and fever responses (). Therefore, in the first 2 sections, we will summarize a series of physiological studies focusing on the medullary raphé, and then studies regarding the preoptic areas. We will focus on other hypothalamic and midbrain nuclei that are associated with cutaneous vasomotor control during thermoregulatory and fever response. A summary of the studies focusing on serotonergic system will be presented, since the medullary raphé region contains the serotonin synthesising B1-B3 bulbospinal cells. The last section highlights several studies focusing on cutaneous vasoconstriction that occurs during aversive/alerting situations, and on possible nuclei that are involved in the psychologically-elicited cutaneous vasoconstriction.
Figure 1.
Schematic model for neuronal pathways controlling cutaneous vasomotor activity. Cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé excite cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic preganglionic neurons in the spinal intermediolateral nucleus at least in part by serotonergic (5-HT) activation of 5-HT2A receptors and by glutamatergic (GLU) activation. Excitatory drive from the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) contributes to maintaining cutaneous sympathetic tone. Temperature-responsive neurons in the caudolateral preoptic region (CLPO) and rostromedial preoptic region (RMPO) provide thermoregulatory control of cutaneous vasomotor response to cold or warm stimuli. Warm-responsive preoptic neurons send direct inhibitory (GABAergic) projections to the medullary raphé. The warm-responsive neurons inhibit cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons under warm-condition and contribute to cutaneous vasodilator response. Some of warm-responsive neurons exert inhibitory influence on cutaneous sympathetic outflow by inhibiting cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) that may provide excitatory drive to the medullary raphé neurons, or by activating cutaneous vasodilatative neurons in the rostral ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (rvlPAG) that may provide inhibitory drive the medullary raphé neurons. Cold-responsive RMPO neurons send direct excitatory (glutamatergic) projections to the medullary raphé. The cold-responsive neurons excite cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons in the cold, and contribute to cutaneous vasoconstriction. The cold-responsive RMPO neurons receive tonic GABAergic inputs under warm-condition. PGE2 possibly inhibits GABAergic interneurons in the RMPO that send direct projection to cold-responsive neurons in the RMPO, and elicit cutaneous vasoconstriction by reducing inhibitory influence on the medullary raphé neurons. The GABAergic interneurons may also exert inhibitory influence on the medullary raphé neurons via other indirect pathway. During aversive psychological events, cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé are activated at least in part by excitatory drive from neurons in the amygdala, the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH), and orexinergic neurons in the hypothalamic area (lateral hypothalamus (LH), perifornical area (PeF) and DMH). Noradrenergic neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC) contribute to the excitatory drive via the amygdala. Activation of the neurons in the habenula elicits cutaneous vasoconstriction possibly by activation of the medullary raphé neurons. Solid black line with a question mark indicates that the pathway is not established. Solid black with dashed lines indicates that it is not known whether pathway is direct or indirect.
Schematic model for neuronal pathways controlling cutaneous vasomotor activity. Cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé excite cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic preganglionic neurons in the spinal intermediolateral nucleus at least in part by serotonergic (5-HT) activation of 5-HT2A receptors and by glutamatergic (GLU) activation. Excitatory drive from the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) contributes to maintaining cutaneous sympathetic tone. Temperature-responsive neurons in the caudolateral preoptic region (CLPO) and rostromedial preoptic region (RMPO) provide thermoregulatory control of cutaneous vasomotor response to cold or warm stimuli. Warm-responsive preoptic neurons send direct inhibitory (GABAergic) projections to the medullary raphé. The warm-responsive neurons inhibit cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons under warm-condition and contribute to cutaneous vasodilator response. Some of warm-responsive neurons exert inhibitory influence on cutaneous sympathetic outflow by inhibiting cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) that may provide excitatory drive to the medullary raphé neurons, or by activating cutaneous vasodilatative neurons in the rostral ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (rvlPAG) that may provide inhibitory drive the medullary raphé neurons. Cold-responsive RMPO neurons send direct excitatory (glutamatergic) projections to the medullary raphé. The cold-responsive neurons excite cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons in the cold, and contribute to cutaneous vasoconstriction. The cold-responsive RMPO neurons receive tonic GABAergic inputs under warm-condition. PGE2 possibly inhibits GABAergic interneurons in the RMPO that send direct projection to cold-responsive neurons in the RMPO, and elicit cutaneous vasoconstriction by reducing inhibitory influence on the medullary raphé neurons. The GABAergic interneurons may also exert inhibitory influence on the medullary raphé neurons via other indirect pathway. During aversive psychological events, cutaneous vasoconstrictor sympathetic premotor neurons in the medullary raphé are activated at least in part by excitatory drive from neurons in the amygdala, the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH), and orexinergic neurons in the hypothalamic area (lateral hypothalamus (LH), perifornical area (PeF) and DMH). Noradrenergic neurons in the locus coeruleus (LC) contribute to the excitatory drive via the amygdala. Activation of the neurons in the habenula elicits cutaneous vasoconstriction possibly by activation of the medullary raphé neurons. Solid black line with a question mark indicates that the pathway is not established. Solid black with dashed lines indicates that it is not known whether pathway is direct or indirect.
Sympathetic Premotor Neurons Regulating Thermoregulatory Cutaneous Vascular Bed
The medullary raphé
The importance of the medullary raphé in controlling cutaneous vasomotor activity was suggested originally by a report that chemical activation of neurons in the medullary raphé at the rostrocaudal level of the caudal third of the facial nucleus increases tail sympathetic nerve activity in rats. Following this report, Blessing and colleagues showed that disinhibition of neurons in the medullary raphé with bicuculline ((γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptor antagonist)) causes strong cutaneous vasoconstriction in the rat tail and the rabbit ear, measured with Doppler flow probes. Inhibition of neurons in the medullary raphé causes cutaneous vasodilatation in the rat tail and the rabbit ear.Cold exposure decreases tail blood flow (cutaneous vasoconstriction). Inhibiting neurons in the medullary raphé reverses cold-evoked cutaneous vasoconstriction in anaesthetized rats by reducing the activation of cutaneous sympathetic nerves (). Heat exposure or warming the preoptic area causes cutaneous vasodilatation and increases tail skin temperature. Blocking GABAergic inhibitory inputs to the medullary raphé neurons with bicuculline suppresses the tail cutaneous vasodilatory response ()
The rostral ventrolateral medulla oblongata (RVLM) contains sympathetic premotor neurons for the cardiovascular system, controlling vasoconstriction, heart rate and arterial pressure. Neurons in the RVLM, like the medullary raphé, are infected at the same early stage after injection of pseudorabies virus into the rat tail. In rats, electrical stimulation of the RVLM reduces tail temperature, indicating cutaneous vasoconstriction. In rabbits, inhibition of neurons in the RVLM increases ear pinna blood flow. Ootsuka and McAllen demonstrated that chemical inactivation of neurons in the RVLM inhibits ongoing tail cutaneous sympathetic fiber discharges and abolishes its normal excitatory response elicited by cooling truncal skin (). These studies suggest that neurons in the RVLM can also influence the thermoregulatory control of cutaneous vasomotor activity. However, further strong skin cooling still increases tail sympathetic nerve discharges after inactivation of neurons in the RVLM (), but not in the medullary raphé (). Thus tonic background drive from the RVLM as well as the medullary raphé is necessary to maintain cutaneous sympathetic activity, while the medullary raphé neurons play a major role in thermoregulatory drive to the cutaneous vascular bed at least during cold- and heat-defense responses. The predominant role of the medullary raphé in cutaneous vasomotor control during thermoregulatory response is partly supported by a report that blockade of inhibitory signal inputs to the medullary raphé but not to the RVLM suppresses cutaneous vasodilatation during heat-defense response ().
Hypothalamic and Midbrain Nuclei Associated with Cutaneous Vasomotor Control
Preoptic area
The preoptic area plays a key role in controlling body temperature, integrating temperature information from shell and core of the body and then sending efferent signals to thermoregulatory effector organs. The preoptic area contains neurons, which respond to local brain, core and skin temperature. Warming the preoptic area elicits cutaneous vasodilatation in the rat tail (), and inhibits cold-induced activation of cutaneous sympathetic fibers supplying the rat tail ().
It has been proposed that the dorsomedial hypothalamus (DMH) integrates thermoregulatory responses to cold and fever. Electrical stimulation of the DMH elicits cutaneous vasoconstriction in the rabbit ear pinna. Pharmacological activation of neurons in the DMH increases cutaneous sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity in rats. However, the inhibition of the DMH neurons fails to suppress the cutaneous vasoconstriction elicited by PGE2 injected into the preoptic area or by skin cooling, suggesting that the DMH is not involved in cutaneous vasoconstriction during cold-defense and fever responses.The DMH has been implicated as mediating behavioral and autonomic physiological response to aversive or psychological stimuli. Cutaneous vasoconstriction is also elicited by aversive environmental events (see ‘Cutaneous vasoconstriction elicited by psychological stimuli’ section in below). The DMH may be important in this response.
Ventral tegmental area and periaqueductal gray matter
Apart from direct projections from the preoptic area to the medullary raphé, the midbrain area seems to participate in cutaneous vasomotor control. Zhang and colleagues found cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), and cutaneous vasodilatative neurons in the rostral ventrolateral periaqueductal gray matter (rvl PAG). Cutaneous vasodilatory response to warming the preoptic area is inhibited by electrical and pharmacological activation of neurons in the VTA (). Blocking downstream signaling from the VTA by transection of area caudal to the VTA elicits cutaneous vasodilatation. Blocking signal inputs from upstream to the VTA by transection of area rostral to the VTA suppresses the cutaneous vasodilatory response to warming the preoptic area.
Contribution of Serotonin in the Regulation of Cutaneous Vasomotor Activity
Neurons in the medullary raphé region include bulbospinal neurons that synthesize 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) , known to affect body temperature. Activation of 5-HT1A receptors decreases body temperature, while activation of 5-HT2A receptors increases body temperature. Acute and chronic inhibition of 5-HT synthesising neurons in the brain causes hypothermia. Transneuronal viral tracing studies in rats have shown that 5-HT neurons in the medullary raphé are infected at the earliest stage after injection of virus into the rat tail. In the study by Toth and colleagues, 90% of virus-infected neurons in the medullary raphé, the parapyramidal region bordering and lateral to the pyramid are found to be 5-HT positive, suggesting that 5-HT is one of the candidate neurotransmitter of bulbospinal neurons controlling tail cutaneous vascular bed. Serotonergic terminals are found in the intermediolateral cell column in the spinal cord. Serotonergic-immunoreactive terminals are juxtaposed to sympathetic preganglionic cells. Pharmacological studies show that 5-HT agonists activate functionally-unspecified sympathetic preganglionic neurons. 5-HT antagonists inhibit excitation of sympathetic preganglionic neurons elicited by stimulation of the medullary raphé. These studies suggest that some of the 5-HT neurons in the medullary raphé are likely to function as cutaneous sympathetic premotor neurons.
5-HT1A receptors
Ootsuka and Blessing conducted a series of studies to investigate contribution of 5-HT system to cutaneous vasomotor control. The 5-HT1A receptors are considered to be inhibitory somatodendric autoreceptors, that are expressed principally on 5-HT cells, although the receptors are also present on non-5-HT neurons. Systemic administration of a 5-HT1A agonist, 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT) inhibits sympathetically-mediated cutaneous vasoconstriction during cold-defense and fever responses. The systemic administration of 8-OH-DPAT does not affect ear pinna cutaneous post-ganglionic sympathetic nerve discharge evoked by electrical stimulation of preganglionic sympathetic fibers. Thus the cutaneous sympatho-inhibitory action of the 8-OH-DPAT is not in the periphery, but in central nervous system, possibly in the medullary raphé. This view is confirmed by further studies in rabbits. Focal injection of 8-OH-DPAT into the medullary raphé inhibits cutaneous vasoconstriction and sympatho-excitation during cold exposure. Furthermore, focal injection of a 5-HT1A antagonists, WAY100635 (N-[2-[4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl]ethyl]- N-(2-pyridyl)cyclohexanecarboxamide) reverses sympathetically-mediated cutaneous vasomotor changes elicited by intravenous injection of 8-OH-DPAT (). Neurons in the medullary raphé inhibited by systemic administration of 8-OH-DPAT increase their activity in response to cold exposure. Thus it is likely that inhibitory 5-HT1A receptors are present in the medullary raphé that mediates cutaneous vasoconstriction in response to cold exposure.
Cutaneous vasomotor activity is also affected by 5-HT2A receptor agonists and antagonists. Activation of 5-HT2A receptors by systemic administration of 5-HT2A agonist, DOI (R(−)-1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenyl)-2-aminopropane hydrochloride) elicits sympathetically-mediated cutaneous vasoconstriction (). This cutaneous sympatho-excitatory effect of 5-HT2A agonists occurs even after the blockade of signaling from the medullary raphé to the spinal cord (), strongly suggesting the involvement of spinal 5-HT2A receptors in the excitation of sympathetic preganglionic cutaneous vasomotor neurons. Indeed, cutaneous sympathetic vasomotor discharges elicited by the stimulation of the medullary raphé is reduced by the blockade of spinal 5HT2A receptors after focal application of the 5HT2A antagonist, SR46349B (trans-4-((3 Z)3-[(2-dimethylaminoethyl)oxyimino]-3-(2-fluorophenyl) propen-1-yl)-phenol, hemifumarate) to the cerebrospinal fluid in the thoracic spinal cord where ear pinna sympathetic vasomotor preganglionic neurons are located
(). These studies support a view that 5-HT neurons in the medullary raphé contribute to the regulation of sympathetic cutaneous vasomotor discharges.
Cutaneous Vasoconstriction Elicited by Salient/Alerting Stimuli
Majority of the studies on central neural mechanisms of cutaneous vasomotor control have been performed from the thermoregulatory point of view, since cutaneous blood flow are closely associated with changes in body temperature. Cutaneous blood flow is also affected by salient or aversive environmental event. Thus, changes in cutaneous blood flow are actually a reliable index to assess alerting state condition as well as thermoregulatory state in experimental animals.Cutaneous vasoconstriction is also part of the patterned cardiovascular response to aversive stimuli or conditioned fear as well as thermoregulatory stimuli, a response known as ‘pale with fright’. The sympathetically-mediated cutaneous vasoconstrictor response to salient stimuli is associated with occurrence of hippocampal theta rhythm, a marker of alertness. The physiological role of the psychologically-elicited cutaneous vasoconstriction is not properly established yet, but it partly contributes to an increase in body temperature, a response referred to as ‘emotional hyperthermia or ‘psychological fever’. The cutaneous vasoconstriction may also contribute to equalizing skin surface temperature to surrounding environmental temperature, so that individuals may have more chance to slip through thermal detection by predators such as rattlesnakes and vampire bats. The cutaneous vasoconstriction may provide some protection to the loss of blood in case of a cut or break in the skin during attacking from predators.Blessing and colleagues have established an animal model of cutaneous vasoconstriction elicited by salient/alerting events, and have investigated brain mechanisms for the response. Cutaneous blood flow falls without changing intestinal, renal or skeletal muscle blood flow, when individuals confront salient or aversive situations (). Similarly to thermoregulatory-elicited response, the psychologically-elicited cutaneous vasoconstriction is reversed by inhibition of neurons in the medullary raphé (), and by 5-HT1A agonist and 5-HT2A antagonists. It should be noted that microinjection of glutamate receptor antagonists in the medullary raphé does not affect cutaneous vasoconstriction elicited by conditioned fear, suggesting that the vasoconstriction response during the fear response is not under local glutamatergic control unlike the febrile response. Dopamine D2 agonists, by its central action, suppress the cutaneous vasoconstriction elicited by alerting stimuli, suggesting the involvement of central dopamine system in cutaneous vasomotor control.
Many investigations have suggested possible brain nuclei that contribute to cutaneous vasomotor control. So far only 2 nuclei have been thoroughly investigated; the medullary raphé and the preoptic area. Some other nuclei such as the VTA, PAG, hypothalamic and other forebrain nuclei are likely involved in the pathways controlling cutaneous vasomotor activity. Further studies are required to characterize these nuclei and their anatomical and functional connections, including connection from cutaneous vasodilatative neurons in the rvl PAG, and cutaneous vasoconstrictor neurons in the VTA to the medullary raphé. The local circuitry in the preoptic area also remains to be delineated.Central mechanisms controlling blood flow to cutaneous vascular bed is essentially integrated into the circulatory system that functions to distribute blood flow to tissues proportional to their activity. Under certain circumstances, central mechanisms of cutaneous blood flow control are overridden by signals from other system such as thermoregulatory and alerting systems. The medullary raphé seems to be a common nucleus controlling cutaneous vasomotor outflow for all purposes.This review does not address thermogenesis, but it is important to note that the medullary raphé is also an important relay for thermogenesis. Significant research progress has enhanced our understanding of central mechanisms controlling thermogenesis focusing on brown adipose tissue (For a review see refs.). Although both cutaneous vasomotor and brown adipose tissue thermogenesis control depend on synaptic relays in the medullary raphé, these 2 thermo effectors targets are controlled by independent neural pathways. From the thermoregulatory point of view, changing cutaneous vasomotor activity is the most cost effective way to cope with thermoregulatory events, and thus the first-choice during a thermoregulatory challenge, because it requires less water resources compared to panting and sweating, and less bodily fuel compered to shivering and non-shivering thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue. This consideration may explain the necessity of the independent pathways.
Authors: Natalia L S Machado; Stephen B G Abbott; Jon M Resch; Lin Zhu; Elda Arrigoni; Bradford B Lowell; Patrick M Fuller; Marco A P Fontes; Clifford B Saper Journal: Curr Biol Date: 2018-07-12 Impact factor: 10.834