Elsevier

Experimental Neurology

Volume 302, April 2018, Pages 46-56
Experimental Neurology

Research paper
The involvement of the pathway connecting the substantia nigra, the periaqueductal gray matter and the retrotrapezoid nucleus in breathing control in a rat model of Parkinson's disease

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.expneurol.2018.01.003Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Parkinson´s disease (PD) is associated with respiratory dysfunction.

  • a rat model of PD has a reduced chemosensory control of breathing compared with age-matched control rats.

  • PD animals have a reduced number of neurons in the RTN and PAG.

  • Connection between SNpc and RTN that goes by PAG can be associated to the breathing impairment in PD-rats.

Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) is characterized by a reduction in the number of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra (SNpc), accompanied by motor and non-motor deficiencies such as respiratory failure. Here, our aim was to investigate possible neuronal communications between the SNpc and chemoreceptor neurons within the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN), in order to explain neurodegeneration and the loss of breathing function in the 6-OHDA PD animal model. Male Wistar rats received tracer injections in the SNpc, RTN and periaqueductal gray (PAG) regions to investigate the projections between those regions. The results showed that neurons of the SNpc project to the RTN by an indirect pathway that goes through the PAG region. In different groups of rats, reductions in the density of neuronal markers (NeuN) and the number of catecholaminergic varicosities in PAG, as well as reductions in the number of CO2-activated PAG neurons with RTN projections, were observed in a 6-OHDA model of PD. Physiological experiments showed that inhibition of the PAG by bilateral injection of muscimol did not produce resting breathing disturbances but instead reduced genioglossus (GGEMG) and abdominal (AbdEMG) muscle activity amplitude induced by hypercapnia in control rats that were urethane-anesthetized, vagotomized, and artificially ventilated. However, in a model of PD, we found reductions in resting diaphragm muscle activity (DiaEMG) and GGEMG frequencies, as well as in hypercapnia-induced DiaEMG, GGEMG and AbdEMG frequencies and GGEMG and AbdEMG amplitudes. Therefore, we can conclude that there is an indirect pathway between neurons of the SNpc and RTN that goes through the PAG and that there is a defect of this pathway in an animal model of PD.

Keywords

Central chemoreflex
Retrotrapezoid nucleus
Ventilation
Periaqueductal gray

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1

JCL and LMO contributed equally to this study.