AXONAL PROJECTIONS OF CAUDAL VENTROLATERAL MEDULLARY AND MEDULLARY RAPHE
NEURONS WITH ACTIVITY CORRELATED TO THE 10-HZ RHYTHM IN SYMPATHETIC NERVE
DISCHARGE.
Barman, Susan M. Hakan S. Orer, and Gerard L. Gebber.
Departments of Pharmacology & Toxicology and Physiology, Michigan State
University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824.
APStracts 2:0236N, 1995.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. This is the first study to map the axonal projections of medullary neurons
that are elements of the network responsible for the 10-Hz rhythm in
sympathetic nerve discharge (SND) of urethan-anesthetized cats. Spike-
triggered averaging and coherence analysis were used to identify caudal
ventrolateral medullary (CVLM) and medullary raphe neurons with activity
correlated to this component of SND. Spike-triggered averaging showed that
CVLM neurons fired significantly earlier (17 ms on the average) than raphe
neurons during the 10-Hz slow wave in inferior cardiac postganglionic SND.
This observation raised the possibility that CVLM neurons are a source of the
discharges of raphe neurons that are correlated to SND. 2. Nineteen of 47 CVLM
neurons with activity correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm in SND were
antidromically activated by microstimulation of the raphe. The longest onset
latency of antidromic activation was 19.9 + 2.8 ms, a value comparable to the
difference in firing times of CVLM and raphe neurons during the naturally
occurring 10-Hz slow wave in inferior cardiac SND. In most cases the response
likely reflected activation of an axonal branch of the CVLM neuron because the
onset latency of antidromic activation could be changed dramatically by moving
the stimulating microelectrode as little as 0.2 mm within the raphe. Also, the
onset latency of antidromic activation of nine CVLM neurons was significantly
shortened (25.0 + 2.5 vs 16.7 + 2.7 ms) when the stimulus intensity was raised
above threshold. 3. The hypothesis that the axons of CVLM neurons with
activity correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm in SND terminated on and excited raphe
neurons was supported by the following observations. First, CVLM neurons could
not be antidromically activated by stimuli applied to sites in tracks located
1.5-2 mm lateral to the midline, contralateral to the neuronal recording site;
thus their axons did not cross the midline. Second, some CVLM neurons could be
antidromically activated by stimuli applied to sites in only one of the tracks
through the midline; thus, it is unlikely that their axons were destined for
more rostral or caudal portions of the brain stem. Third, 37% of the raphe
neurons with activity correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm were synaptically
activated by microstimulation of the CVLM with a minimum onset latency of 18.1
+ 2.6 ms. This value was not significantly different than the longest onset
latency of antidromic activation of CVLM neurons by raphe stimulation. 4. CVLM
neurons with activity correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm in SND could not be
antidromically activated by microstimulation of the rostral ventrolateral
medulla (RVLM) or thoracic spinal cord. Thus CVLM neurons are not a direct
source of the 10-Hz discharges of RVLM or preganglionic sympathetic neurons.
5. Eight of 41 raphe neurons with activity correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm in
SND were antidromically activated by microstimulation of the CVLM. The latency
of the antidromic response of six raphe neurons was shortened from 15.2 + 3.1
to 11.9 + 3.1 ms by raising stimulus current above threshold, implying the
existence of local axonal branching. The onset latency of antidromic
activation of five raphe neurons was changed by moving the stimulating
microelectrode within the CVLM. 6. The axons of at least some of these raphe
neurons likely terminated in the CVLM because higher current was required to
antidromically activate these neurons from sites in a track located 0.5 mm
further lateral, and they were not antidromically activated by
microstimulation of the RVLM. Also 32% of the CVLM neurons were either excited
or inhibited by microstimulation of the raphe. The minimum onset latency of
synaptic activation (18.3 + 4.2 ms) or inhibition (10-20 ms) of CVLM neurons
by raphe stimulation was similar to the longest onset latency of antidromic
activation of raphe neurons by CVLM microstimulation. 7. These data are
consistent with the view that CVLM and raphe neurons whose discharges are
correlated to the 10-Hz rhythm in SND are interconnected. Such a circuit would
fit the model of a distributed network of neurons responsible for this rhythm
as proposed in earlier studies from this laboratory.
Received 17 April 1995; accepted in final form 22 June 1995.
APS Manuscript Number J259-5.
Article publication pending J. Neurophysiol.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 14 August 1995.