Brainstem Substrates of Sympatho-Motor Circuitry Identified Using Trans-Synaptic Tracing with Pseudorabies Virus Recombinants

Male Neurons Sympathetic Nervous System Swine Green Fluorescent Proteins Fluorescent Antibody Technique Efferent Pathways Herpesvirus 1, Suid Immunohistochemistry Rats 3. Good health Rats, Sprague-Dawley Luminescent Proteins 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Stress, Physiological Adrenal Glands Animals Autonomic Pathways Adrenergic Fibers Muscle, Skeletal Cells, Cultured Brain Stem
DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.23-11-04657.2003 Publication Date: 2018-04-13T22:30:28Z
ABSTRACT
Previous physiological investigations have suggested the existence of a neural circuit that coordinates activation of motor and autonomic efferents before or at the onset of exercise. Traditionally these circuits have been postulated to involve forebrain areas. However, overlapping populations of medullary reticular formation neurons that participate in motor or autonomic control have been described previously, suggesting that individual pontomedullary reticular formation neurons may coordinate both motor and autonomic responses. We tested this hypothesis by conducting transneuronal retrograde tracing of motor and sympathetic nervous system pathways in rats using recombinant strains of pseudorabies virus (PRV). A PRV strain expressing the green fluorescent protein (PRV-152) was injected into the left gastrocnemius muscle, which was surgically sympathectomized, whereas another recombinant (PRV-BaBlu) was injected into the left adrenal gland. Immunofluorescence methods using monospecific antisera and distinct fluorophores identified neurons infected with one or both of the recombinants. Brainstem neurons coinfected with both PRV recombinants, which presumably had collateralized projections to both adrenal sympathetic preganglionic neurons and gastrocnemius motoneurons, were observed in several areas of the pontomedullary reticular formation. The largest number of such neurons was located in the rostral ventromedial medulla within the ventral gigantocellular nucleus, gigantocellular nucleus pars alpha, raphe obscurus, and raphe magnus. These neurons are candidates for relaying central command signals to the spinal cord.
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