Occipital artery injections of 5-HT may directly activate the cell bodies of vagal and glossopharyngeal afferent cell bodies in the rat

P Lacolley, JR Owen, K Sandock, THJ Lewis, JN Bates… - Neuroscience, 2006 - Elsevier
P Lacolley, JR Owen, K Sandock, THJ Lewis, JN Bates, TP Robertson, SJ Lewis
Neuroscience, 2006Elsevier
The primary objective of this study was to determine whether circulating factors gain direct
access to and affect the activity of vagal afferent cell bodies in the nodose ganglia and
glossopharyngeal afferents cell bodies in the petrosal ganglia, of the rat. We found that the
occipital and internal carotid arteries provided the sole blood supply to the nodose ganglia,
and that iv injections of the tracer, Basic Blue 9, elicited strong cytoplasmic staining in vagal
and glossopharyngeal afferent cell bodies that was prevented by prior ligation of the …
The primary objective of this study was to determine whether circulating factors gain direct access to and affect the activity of vagal afferent cell bodies in the nodose ganglia and glossopharyngeal afferents cell bodies in the petrosal ganglia, of the rat. We found that the occipital and internal carotid arteries provided the sole blood supply to the nodose ganglia, and that i.v. injections of the tracer, Basic Blue 9, elicited strong cytoplasmic staining in vagal and glossopharyngeal afferent cell bodies that was prevented by prior ligation of the occipital but not the internal carotid arteries. We also found that occipital artery injections of 5-HT elicited pronounced dose-dependent reductions in heart rate and diastolic arterial blood pressure that were (1) virtually abolished after application of the local anesthetic, procaine, to the ipsilateral nodose and petrosal ganglia, (2) markedly attenuated after transection of the ipsilateral vagus between the nodose ganglion and brain and virtually abolished after subsequent transection of the ipsilateral glossopharyngeal nerve between the petrosal ganglion and the brain, (3) augmented after ipsilateral transection of the aortic depressor and carotid sinus nerves, and (4) augmented after transection of all ipsilateral glossopharyngeal and vagal afferent nerves except for vagal cardiopulmonary afferents. These findings suggest that blood-borne 5-HT in the occipital artery gains direct access to and activates the cell bodies of vagal cardiopulmonary afferents of the rat and glossopharyngeal afferents of undetermined modalities.
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