40 research outputs found

    Extrinsic primary afferent signalling in the gut

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    Visceral sensory neurons activate reflex pathways that control gut function and also give rise to important sensations, such as fullness, bloating, nausea, discomfort, urgency and pain. Sensory neurons are organised into three distinct anatomical pathways to the central nervous system (vagal, thoracolumbar and lumbosacral). Although remarkable progress has been made in characterizing the roles of many ion channels, receptors and second messengers in visceral sensory neurons, the basic aim of understanding how many classes there are, and how they differ, has proven difficult to achieve. We suggest that just five structurally distinct types of sensory endings are present in the gut wall that account for essentially all of the primary afferent neurons in the three pathways. Each of these five major structural types of endings seems to show distinctive combinations of physiological responses. These types are: 'intraganglionic laminar' endings in myenteric ganglia; 'mucosal' endings located in the subepithelial layer; 'muscular–mucosal' afferents, with mechanosensitive endings close to the muscularis mucosae; 'intramuscular' endings, with endings within the smooth muscle layers; and 'vascular' afferents, with sensitive endings primarily on blood vessels. 'Silent' afferents might be a subset of inexcitable 'vascular' afferents, which can be switched on by inflammatory mediators. Extrinsic sensory neurons comprise an attractive focus for targeted therapeutic intervention in a range of gastrointestinal disorders.Australian National Health and Medical Research Counci

    Neck muscle afferents influence oromotor and cardiorespiratory brainstem neural circuits

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    Sensory information arising from the upper neck is important in the reflex control of posture and eye position. It has also been linked to the autonomic control of the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Whiplash associated disorders (WAD) and cervical dystonia, which involve disturbance to the neck region, can often present with abnormalities to the oromotor, respiratory and cardiovascular systems. We investigated the potential neural pathways underlying such symptoms. Simulating neck afferent activity by electrical stimulation of the second cervical nerve in a working heart brainstem preparation (WHBP) altered the pattern of central respiratory drive and increased perfusion pressure. Tracing central targets of these sensory afferents revealed projections to the intermedius nucleus of the medulla (InM). These anterogradely labelled afferents co-localised with parvalbumin and vesicular glutamate transporter 1 indicating that they are proprioceptive. Anterograde tracing from the InM identified projections to brain regions involved in respiratory, cardiovascular, postural and oro-facial behaviours-the neighbouring hypoglossal nucleus, facial and motor trigeminal nuclei, parabrachial nuclei, rostral and caudal ventrolateral medulla and nucleus ambiguus. In brain slices, electrical stimulation of afferent fibre tracts lateral to the cuneate nucleus monosynaptically excited InM neurones. Direct stimulation of the InM in the WHBP mimicked the response of second cervical nerve stimulation. These results provide evidence of pathways linking upper cervical sensory afferents with CNS areas involved in autonomic and oromotor control, via the InM. Disruption of these neuronal pathways could, therefore, explain the dysphagic and cardiorespiratory abnormalities which may accompany cervical dystonia and WAD

    Localization of receptors for calcitonin-gene-related peptide to intraganglionic laminar endings of the mouse esophagus: peripheral interaction between vagal and spinal afferents?

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    The calcitonin-gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor is a heterodimer of calcitonin-receptor-like receptor (CLR) and receptor-activity-modifying protein 1 (RAMP1). Despite the importance of CGRP in regulating gastrointestinal functions, nothing is known about the distribution and function of CLR/RAMP1 in the esophagus, where up to 90 % of spinal afferent neurons contain CGRP. We detected CLR/RAMP1 in the mouse esophagus using immunofluorescence and confocal laser scanning microscopy and examined their relationship with neuronal elements of the myenteric plexus. Immunoreactivity for CLR and RAMP1 colocalized with VGLUT2-positive intraganglionic laminar endings (IGLEs), which were contacted by CGRP-positive varicose axons presumably of spinal afferent origin, typically at sites of CRL/RAMP1 immunoreactivity. This provides an anatomical basis for interaction between spinal afferent fibers and IGLEs. Immunoreactive CLR and RAMP1 also colocalized in myenteric neurons. Thus, CGRP-containing spinal afferents may interact with both vagal IGLEs and myenteric neurons in the mouse esophagus, possibly modulating motility reflexes and inflammatory hypersensitivity

    Vagal and spinal mechanosensors in the rat stomach and colon have multiple receptive fields

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    Mechano- and chemosensitive extrinsic primary afferents innervating the gastrointestinal tract convey important information regarding the state of ingested nutrients and specific motor patterns to the central nervous system via splanchnic and vagal nerves. Little is known about the organization of peripheral receptive sites of afferents and their correspondence to morphologically identified terminal structures. Mechano- and chemosensory characteristics and receptive fields of single vagal fibers innervating the stomach as well as lumbar splanchnic nerves innervating the distal colon were identified using an in vitro perifusion system. Twenty-three (17%) of one-hundred thirty-six vagal units identified were found to have multiple, punctate receptive fields, up to 35 mm apart, and were distributed throughout the stomach. Evidence was based on similarity of generated spike forms, occlusion, and latency determinations. Most responded with brief bursts of activity to mucosal stroking with von Frey hairs (10-200 mg) but not to stretch, and 32% responded to capsaicin (10(-5) M). They were classified as rapidly adapting mucosal receptors. Four (8%) of fifty-three single units recorded from the lumbar splanchnic nerve had more than one, punctate receptive field in the distal colon, up to 40 mm apart. They responded to blunt probing, particularly from the serosal side, and variously to chemical stimulation with 5-hydroxytryptamine and capsaicin. We conclude that a proportion of gastrointestinal mechanosensors has multiple receptive fields and suggest that they integrate mechanical and chemical information from an entire organ, constituting the generalists in visceral sensation.Berthoud, Hans - Rudolf ; Lynn, Penny A. ; Blackshaw, L. Ashle

    RECTOSPINAL NEURONS: CELL BODIES, PATHWAYS, IMMUNOCYTO-CHEMISTRY AND ULTRASTRUCTURE

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    none6A novel class of enteric neurons projecting directly from the rectal wall to the spinal cord, “rectospinal neurons”, was investigated in rats by combined retrograde neuronal tracing, immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy. Rectospinal neurons were almost confined to myenteric ganglia of the distal rectum below the pelvic diaphragm and were labeled preferentially by injections into spinal cord segments L6/S1. Injections into more rostral spinal cord segments resulted in hardly any labeled enteric neurons. Dorsal and ventral rhizotomy experiments indicated an almost exclusive projection of rectospinal neurons through dorsal roots L6/S1 to the respective spinal cord segments. Among various peptides immunostained, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and calcitonin gene-related peptide were selectively found in rectospinal neurons, which were also shown to contain calbindin, neurofilament protein- and peripherin-inununoreactivity. Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide- and calbindin-immunostaining were frequently co-localized in the same perikarya, while calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive rectospinal neurons probably represented a separate population. Neonatal capsaicin treatment did not significantly reduce the number of rectospinal neurons. Electron microscopy revealed synaptic contacts on the surface of rectospinal neurons. Taken together, these results establish rectospinal neurons as an anatomically and neurochemically distinct class of enteric neurons. Synaptic contacts on rectospinal neurons suggest that these neurons may function as a direct link from the enteric to the central nervous system, thus indicating that connections between these two networks are reciprocal.mixedNEUHUBER WL; APPELT M; POLAK JM; BAIER-KUSTERMANN W; L. ABELLI; FERRI G-L.Neuhuber, Wl; Appelt, M; Polak, Jm; BAIER KUSTERMANN, W; Abelli, Luigi; Ferri, G. L

    non-nitrergic subpopulation

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