Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery

Cardiorespiratory recovery from apneas requires dynamic responses of brainstem circuitry. One implicated component is the raphe system of Pet1-expressing (largely serotonergic) neurons, however their precise requirement neonatally for homeostasis is unclear, yet central toward understanding newborn...

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Main Authors: Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson, Andrea E Cocoran, YoonJeung Chang, Eugene Nattie, Susan M Dymecki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2018-10-01
Series:eLife
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/37857
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spelling doaj-b4f4bd4e59e64c279b9f986867c4cdc62021-05-05T16:14:15ZengeLife Sciences Publications LtdeLife2050-084X2018-10-01710.7554/eLife.37857Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recoveryRyan T Dosumu-Johnson0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0120-9565Andrea E Cocoran1YoonJeung Chang2Eugene Nattie3Susan M Dymecki4https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0910-9881Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United StatesDepartment of Molecular & Systems Biology, The Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, United StatesDepartment of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United StatesDepartment of Molecular & Systems Biology, The Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, United StatesDepartment of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United StatesCardiorespiratory recovery from apneas requires dynamic responses of brainstem circuitry. One implicated component is the raphe system of Pet1-expressing (largely serotonergic) neurons, however their precise requirement neonatally for homeostasis is unclear, yet central toward understanding newborn cardiorespiratory control and dysfunction. Here we show that acute in vivo perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity, via triggering cell-autonomously the synthetic inhibitory receptor hM4Di, resulted in altered baseline cardiorespiratory properties and diminished apnea survival. Respiratory more than heart rate recovery was impaired, uncoupling their normal linear relationship. Disordered gasp recovery from the initial apnea distinguished mice that would go on to die during subsequent apneas. Further, the risk likelihood of apnea-related mortality associated with suppression of Pet1 neurons was higher for animals with baseline elevated ventilatory equivalents for oxygen. These findings establish that Pet1 neurons play an active role in neonatal cardiorespiratory homeostasis and provide mechanistic plausibility for the serotonergic abnormalities associated with SIDS.https://elifesciences.org/articles/37857autoresuscitationneonatalrapheserotonergic systemchemogeneticsSIDS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson
Andrea E Cocoran
YoonJeung Chang
Eugene Nattie
Susan M Dymecki
spellingShingle Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson
Andrea E Cocoran
YoonJeung Chang
Eugene Nattie
Susan M Dymecki
Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
eLife
autoresuscitation
neonatal
raphe
serotonergic system
chemogenetics
SIDS
author_facet Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson
Andrea E Cocoran
YoonJeung Chang
Eugene Nattie
Susan M Dymecki
author_sort Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson
title Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
title_short Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
title_full Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
title_fullStr Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
title_full_unstemmed Acute perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
title_sort acute perturbation of pet1-neuron activity in neonatal mice impairs cardiorespiratory homeostatic recovery
publisher eLife Sciences Publications Ltd
series eLife
issn 2050-084X
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Cardiorespiratory recovery from apneas requires dynamic responses of brainstem circuitry. One implicated component is the raphe system of Pet1-expressing (largely serotonergic) neurons, however their precise requirement neonatally for homeostasis is unclear, yet central toward understanding newborn cardiorespiratory control and dysfunction. Here we show that acute in vivo perturbation of Pet1-neuron activity, via triggering cell-autonomously the synthetic inhibitory receptor hM4Di, resulted in altered baseline cardiorespiratory properties and diminished apnea survival. Respiratory more than heart rate recovery was impaired, uncoupling their normal linear relationship. Disordered gasp recovery from the initial apnea distinguished mice that would go on to die during subsequent apneas. Further, the risk likelihood of apnea-related mortality associated with suppression of Pet1 neurons was higher for animals with baseline elevated ventilatory equivalents for oxygen. These findings establish that Pet1 neurons play an active role in neonatal cardiorespiratory homeostasis and provide mechanistic plausibility for the serotonergic abnormalities associated with SIDS.
topic autoresuscitation
neonatal
raphe
serotonergic system
chemogenetics
SIDS
url https://elifesciences.org/articles/37857
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AT andreaecocoran acuteperturbationofpet1neuronactivityinneonatalmiceimpairscardiorespiratoryhomeostaticrecovery
AT yoonjeungchang acuteperturbationofpet1neuronactivityinneonatalmiceimpairscardiorespiratoryhomeostaticrecovery
AT eugenenattie acuteperturbationofpet1neuronactivityinneonatalmiceimpairscardiorespiratoryhomeostaticrecovery
AT susanmdymecki acuteperturbationofpet1neuronactivityinneonatalmiceimpairscardiorespiratoryhomeostaticrecovery
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