Pre-Bötzinger complex: a brainstem region that may generate respiratory rhythm in mammals

JC Smith, HH Ellenberger, K Ballanyi, DW Richter… - Science, 1991 - science.org
JC Smith, HH Ellenberger, K Ballanyi, DW Richter, JL Feldman
Science, 1991science.org
The location of neurons generating the rhythm of breathing in mammals is unknown. By
microsection of the neonatal rat brainstem in vitro, a limited region of the ventral medulla (the
pre-Bötzinger Complex) that contains neurons essential for rhythmogenesis was identified.
Rhythm generation was eliminated by removal of only this region. Medullary slices
containing the pre-Bötzinger Complex generated respiratory-related oscillations similar to
those generated by the whole brainstem in vitro, and neurons with voltage-dependent …
The location of neurons generating the rhythm of breathing in mammals is unknown. By microsection of the neonatal rat brainstem in vitro, a limited region of the ventral medulla (the pre-Bötzinger Complex) that contains neurons essential for rhythmogenesis was identified. Rhythm generation was eliminated by removal of only this region. Medullary slices containing the pre-Bötzinger Complex generated respiratory-related oscillations similar to those generated by the whole brainstem in vitro, and neurons with voltage-dependent pacemaker-like properties were identified in this region. Thus, the respiratory rhythm in the mammalian neonatal nervous system may result from a population of conditional bursting pacemaker neurons in the pre-Bötzinger Complex.
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