Organization of Central Sympathic Pathways

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $504,699 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Any condition that threatens homeostasis such as tissue injury, hemorrhage, hypoxia, infection, hypothermia, or psychological stress elicits changes in autonomic nervous system (ANS) function and specific behaviors. These changes can be beneficial for survival if transient but pathogenic if sustained, as in hypertension. The main new idea tested is that C1 neurons, a group of catecholaminergic/glutamatergic neurons within the rostral ventrolateral medulla of all mammals, including humans, are a nodal point for expression of these stress responses. That is, C1 neurons function like a switchboard enabling the expression of a large variety of ANS responses to acute physical and psychological stresses mediated by both sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions the ANS. The proposed experiments will use innovative methods (e.g. intersectional genetics, optogenetics, pharmacogenetics) designed to test key aspects of this theory, with particular emphasis on such novel topics as anti-inflammation, the prevention of hypoxic tissue damage and behavioral effects elicited by C1 cell activation. This knowledge is central to our understanding of how blood pressure and other physiological functions are regulated by the autonomic nervous system in healthy, diseased or stressed states. The specific aims tested are: 1: Is C1 cell stimulation sufficient to elicit physiological and behavioral signs of stress? Do C1 cells produce these effects by releasing glutamate or a catecholamine? Activation of C1 cells with optogenetics in unanesthetized transgenic mice is expected to result in signs of stress. 2: Are C1 cells necessary for responses to physiological or psychological stressors? Using loss of function optogenetics (archaerhodopsin) C1 cell activation is expected to be necessary to maintain BP and HR in awake rats subjected to non-hypotensive hemorrhage, hypoxia or bacterial infection. We will also test whether C1 cells are required for the autonomic (e.g. cardiovascular, respiratory, GI and anti-inflammatory components) and behavioral manifestations of restraint stress in conscious mice by either inhibiting (pharmacogenetically) or selectively destroying these neurons. 3: Which C1 cells regulate blood pressure? Using mouse intersectional genetics and Boolean vectors, subgroups of C1 cells defined by peptide expression or CNS projection will be transduced to selectively express ChannelRhodopsin2. These subgroups are expected to have distinct projections and their optogenetic activation is expected to elicit highly specific physiological and behavioral responses.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9850614
Project number
5R01HL028785-37
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
Principal Investigator
RUTH L STORNETTA
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$504,699
Award type
5
Project period
1989-04-01 → 2021-06-30