| Literature DB >> 33707205 |
Abstract
Feeding and breathing are two functions vital to the survival of all vertebrate species. Throughout the evolution, vertebrates living in different environments have evolved drastically different modes of feeding and breathing through using diversified orofacial and pharyngeal (oropharyngeal) muscles. The oropharyngeal structures are controlled by hindbrain neural circuits. The developing hindbrain shares strikingly conserved organizations and gene expression patterns across vertebrates, thus begs the question of how a highly conserved hindbrain generates circuits subserving diverse feeding/breathing patterns. In this review, we summarize major modes of feeding and breathing and principles underlying their coordination in many vertebrate species. We provide a hypothesis for the existence of a common hindbrain circuit at the phylotypic embryonic stage controlling oropharyngeal movements that is shared across vertebrate species; and reconfiguration and repurposing of this conserved circuit give rise to more complex behaviors in adult higher vertebrates.Entities:
Keywords: breathing; central rhythm generator; evolution; feeding; hindbrain
Year: 2021 PMID: 33707205 PMCID: PMC8174041 DOI: 10.1523/ENEURO.0435-20.2021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: eNeuro ISSN: 2373-2822
Glossary
| Buccal cavity | Anterior portion of the digestive system that is bounded by the lips anteriorly and palatoglossal arch posteriorly. |
| Pharynx | Part of the throat posterior to the oral and nasal cavity, sitting above the esophagus. |
| Larynx | An organ that sits at the anterior neck, gating the entrance of trachea/lung and housing the vocal fold for vocalization. |
| Pharyngeal slits | Series of openings in the pharynx. Originally assisted in filter-feeding in primitive chordates and have been modified extensively throughout evolution. |
| Hyolingual apparatus | The hyoid (a U-shaped bone at the anterior neck anchoring the tongue and larynx) and tongue are collectively referred to as the hyolingual apparatus. |
| Glottis | The space between the vocal folds, anatomically known as the rima glottidis. |
| Epiglottis | A cartilage flap in front of larynx that normally stands upright but close downwards to help airway protection during swallowing. |
| Palate | The roof of the mouth that separates the nasal and oral cavity. In mammals, the anterior portion is bony (hard palate) and the posterior portion is muscular (soft palate). |
| Hox genes | An evolutionary conserved group of homeobox genes that is crucial for specifying the anterior-posterior axis of an animal. |
| Central rhythm | A neuronal circuit that produces rhythmic signals in the absence of sensory inputs. CRGs are assumed to participate in the generation of basic oropharyngeal and locomotor behaviors. |
Figure 1.Anatomy of the oropharyngeal region involved in feeding and breathing in major vertebrate species. Schematic representation of gross oropharyngeal anatomy of different vertebrates in sagittal section. Major structures color-coded as indicated. Blue arrows indicate pathways for breathing, while brown arrows indicate pathways for feeding. , Sagittal section of a hagfish. Different gill pouches structures of Atlantic and Pacific hagfish are depicted. During breathing, the tooth plate is in its retracted position, while the velum repeatedly scrolls and unscrolls to allow water flowing in from the nostril. The water then flows through the gills and exits either at the common PCD or at individual gill slit. , Schematic sagittal view of fish oral cavity with gills depicted. , Schematic sagittal view of a frog oral cavity. , Position of a feeding snake in sagittal plane (prey is not depicted for simplicity) showing the protruded glottis. , Schematic sagittal view of a bird’s partially separated oral and nasal cavities. , Sagittal representation of an adult pilot whale (Globicephala melaena). The intranasal position of the larynx allows simultaneous feeding and vocalization. , Sagittal view of a human infant. , Sagittal view of a human adult. The larynx in adult is descended compared with the elevated position in infant. , Oropharyngeal structure of human adult during swallowing. The food bolus (brown) pushes the epiglottis down, allowing it to contact with the elevated larynx to assist airway protection during swallowing in adult humans. Drawings are based on or modified from Eom and Wood (2019), Ding et al. (2019), Mason et al. (2020), Cundall et al. (2014), Brown and Stallknecht (2008), Laitman and Reidenberg (1997), and Arvedson and Lefton-Greif (1998).
Summary of major feeding and breathing modes and their respective oropharyngeal apparatus, controller muscle groups, and putative innervating nerves
| Species | Feeding/breathing modes | Oropharyngeal apparatus | Putative innervating nerves |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hagfish | Feeding | Basal plate, dentitions (palatal tooth and tooth plates), oropharyngeal and axial muscles | V (oropharyngeal muscles) |
| Aquatic breathing | Velum, gill pouches | V (velum), VII, IX, X, occipitospinal nerves (gill pouches) | |
| Lamprey | Feeding, aquatic breathing | Velum (larvae), branchial basket | V (velum), VII, IX, X (branchial basket) |
| Fish | Feeding, forced ventilation, air-breathing | Jaw, buccal and opercular cavity (glottis, ABO for air-breathing) | V (jaw), VII (buccal and opercular cavity), IX (gill), X (gill, glottis) |
| Feeding and gill ventilation | Jaw, buccal and opercular cavity | V (jaw), VII (buccal and opercular cavity), IX, X (gill) | |
| Amphibians | Feeding | Jaw, tongue, hyoid | V (jaws), VII, IX, X (glottis) |
| Air breathing | Jaw, tongue, hyoid, ABO | V (jaws), VII, IX, X (glottis), spinal nerves (abdominal muscles in expiration) | |
| Reptiles | Feeding | Jaw, hyolingual, pharynx | V (jaws), VII, XII (hyolingual), IX, X |
| Air breathing | Jaw, hyolingual, pharynx, axial muscles | V, VII, IX, X, XII, spinal nerves | |
| Mammals | Feeding | Jaw, hyolingual, pharynx | V, VII, IX, X, XII, spinal nerves |
| Air breathing | Nose (hyolingual when breathing through mouth), axial muscles | VII, X, XI, XII, spinal nerves |
See Oisi et al. (2015) for more details.
Major action and cranial motor nerve supply of oropharyngeal muscles in human
| Muscle group | Muscle | Nerve supply | Major action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jaw (masticatory) muscles | Masseter | V | Elevates the mandible and closes the mouth |
| Temporal | V | Elevates the mandible and closes the mouth (contraction of the entire muscle); retruding the mandible (contraction of posterior fibers only) | |
| Medial pterygoid | V | Elevates the mandible and closes the mouth | |
| Lateral pterygoid | V | Protrudes and depresses the mandible (bilateral contraction); lateral excursion of the mandible to the opposite site (unilateral contraction) | |
| Hyoid muscles (suprahyoid group) | Digastric | Anterior belly: V; | Depresses the mandible when hyoid is fixed or elevates the hyoid and larynx if the mandible is fixed |
| Mylohyoid | V | Depresses the mandible when the hyoid attachment is fixed or elevates the hyoid bone when the mandibular attachment is fixed | |
| Geniohyoid | C1 | Assists in depression of the mandible, elevation and protrusion of the hyoid, and widening of the pharynx | |
| Stylohyoid | VII | Elevates and retracts the hyolingual apparatus and keeps the pharynx open during inspiration | |
| Hyoid muscles (infrahyoid group) | Omohyoid | C2, C3 | Depresses and retracts the hyoid and larynx |
| Sternohyoid | C1–C3 | Depresses the hyoid | |
| Sternothyoid | C1–C3 | Depresses the hyoid and larynx when activated along with other infrahyoid muscles and opening the laryngeal inlet when activated alone | |
| Thyrohyoid | C1 | Depresses the hyoid when activated with other infrahyoid muscles and elevates the larynx when the hyoid is stabilized | |
| Pharyngeal muscles (outer circular layer) | Inferior constrictor | X | Constricts the wall of pharynx during swallowing |
| Middle constrictor | X | ||
| Superior constrictor | X | ||
| Pharyngeal muscles (inner longitudinal layer) | Stylopharyngeus | IX | Shortens and widens the pharynx during swallowing |
| Salpingopharyngeus | X | ||
| Palatopharyngeus | X | ||
| Tongue muscles (extrinsic) | Genioglossus | XII | Depresses and protrudes the tongue (bilateral contraction) or contralaterally deviates the tongue (unilateral contraction) |
| Hyoglossus | XII | Depresses and retracts the tongue | |
| Styloglossus | XII | Retracts and elevates lateral portion of the tongue (midline depression known as cupping) | |
| Palatoglossus | X | Elevates the lingual root during swallowing and depresses the soft palate | |
| Tongue muscles (intrinsic) | Superior longitudinal | XII | Retracts and broadens the tongue, elevates tongue apex |
| Inferior longitudinal | XII | Retracts and broadens the tongue, lowers tongue apex | |
| Transverse | XII | Narrows and elongates the tongue | |
| Vertical | XII | Broadens and elongates the tongue |
Figure 2.The highly conserved embryonic hindbrain and PAs and their associated circuits and peripheral structures. Left panel, Schematic representation of the vertebrate embryonic hindbrain. The developing hindbrain is segmented into rhombomeres (r1–r8), which is defined by combinatorial expression of different genes (e.g., Hox genes) and transcription factors (e.g., EGR2, also called Krox-20), depicted in the middle. Locations of cranial sensory ganglia (gV, gVII–gXI) and otic vesicles (ov) are shown on the left side of the hindbrain. The right side of the hindbrain shows motoneuron distribution of major cranial motor nuclei and their respective exit points. Neural crest cells form migratory streams (black arrows) that originate from rhombomeres to their respective PA. Right panel, Each PA is characterized by distinct nerve innervation, skeletal and muscular derivatives (table on the right). Drawings of rhombomeres and PAs and their derivatives are based on Kiecker and Lumsden (2005) and Maynard et al. (2020).
Figure 3.Hypothesized conserved vertebrate embryonic hindbrain circuit for intraoral fluid transportation and its later stage reconfigurations in mammals. The fluid-surrounding environment and fluid ingestion behavior in aquatic and in embryonic terrestrial vertebrates suggest the existence of a conserved embryonic circuit that generates the fluid-transporting behavior in all vertebrates (, ). , In primitive vertebrates like lampreys, this fluid-transporting circuit consists of two CRGs, with pT-CRG as the dominant CRG, that drive rhythmic and sequential activations of downstream motor nuclei. , In advanced vertebrates, a series of CRGs for each pair of rhombomeres work together to support the directional fluid-transporting behavior. Hypothesized serial CRGs are sequentially coupled such that an anterior CRG preferentially drives the activity of posterior CRGs, thereby produces sequential activation of oropharyngeal muscles and directional movement of fluid. , Splitting, reconfiguration and repurposing of the embryonic fluid-transporting CRGs result in separated feeding-related and breathing-related CRGs in adult mammalian hindbrain. Only preBötC is highlighted among the breathing CRGs for simplicity. The need of continuous breathing makes preBötC the dominant CRG, which broadcasts its rhythm to other CRGs or motoneurons, ventral respiratory group (VRG). Feeding-related CRGs control chewing and licking largely function independent of breathing CRGs because of structural segregations of food and air intake pathways. Swallowing inhibits breathing to prevent aspiration.