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  • Role of serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons in hypercapnia-induced arousals.

Role of serotonergic dorsal raphe neurons in hypercapnia-induced arousals.

Nature communications (2020-06-04)
Satvinder Kaur, Roberto De Luca, Mudasir A Khanday, Sathyajit S Bandaru, Renner C Thomas, Rebecca Y Broadhurst, Anne Venner, William D Todd, Patrick M Fuller, Elda Arrigoni, Clifford B Saper
ABSTRACT

During obstructive sleep apnea, elevation of CO2 during apneas contributes to awakening and restoring airway patency. We previously found that glutamatergic neurons in the external lateral parabrachial nucleus (PBel) containing calcitonin gene related peptide (PBelCGRP neurons) are critical for causing arousal during hypercapnia. However, others found that genetic deletion of serotonin (5HT) neurons in the brainstem also prevented arousal from hypercapnia. To examine interactions between the two systems, we showed that dorsal raphe (DR) 5HT neurons selectively targeted the PBel. Either genetically directed deletion or acute optogenetic silencing of DRSert neurons dramatically increased the latency of mice to arouse during hypercapnia, as did silencing DRSert terminals in the PBel. This effect was mediated by 5HT2a receptors which are expressed by PBelCGRP neurons. Our results indicate that the serotonergic input from the DR to the PBel via 5HT2a receptors is critical for modulating the sensitivity of the PBelCGRP neurons that cause arousal to rising levels of blood CO2.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
REDExtract-N-Amp Tissue PCR Kit, sufficient for 10 reactions, sufficient for 100 reactions, sufficient for 1000 reactions, hotstart, dNTPs included
Supelco
Serotonin, analytical standard