Muscarinic Inhibition of Hypoglossal Motoneurons: Possible Implications for Upper Airway Muscle Hypotonia during REM Sleep

毒蕈碱受体抑制舌下神经运动神经元:可能对快速眼动睡眠期间上呼吸道肌肉张力减退产生影响

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Abstract

Proper function of pharyngeal dilator muscles, including the genioglossus muscle of the tongue, is required to maintain upper airway patency. During sleep, the activity of these muscles is suppressed, and as a result individuals with obstructive sleep apnea experience repeated episodes of upper airway closure when they are asleep, in particular during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep. Blocking cholinergic transmission in the hypoglossal motor nucleus (MoXII) restores REM sleep genioglossus activity, highlighting the importance of cholinergic transmission in the inhibition of hypoglossal motor neurons (HMNs) during REM sleep. Glutamatergic afferent input from neurons in the parahypoglossal (PH) region to the HMNs is critical for MoXII respiratory motor output. We hypothesized that state-dependent cholinergic regulation may be mediated by this pathway. Here we studied the effects of cholinergic transmission in HMNs in adult male and female mice using patch-clamp recordings in brain slices. Using channelrhodopsin-2-assisted circuit mapping, we first demonstrated that PH glutamatergic neurons directly and robustly activate HMNs (PH(Glut) → HMNs). We then show that carbachol consistently depresses this input and that this effect is presynaptic. Additionally, carbachol directly affects HMNs by a variable combination of muscarinic-mediated excitatory and inhibitory responses. Altogether, our results suggest that cholinergic signaling impairs upper airway dilator muscle activity by suppressing glutamatergic input from PH premotoneurons to HMNs and by directly inhibiting HMNs. Our findings highlight the complexity of cholinergic control of HMNs at both the presynaptic and postsynaptic levels and provide a possible mechanism for REM sleep suppression of upper airway muscle activity.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Individuals with obstructive sleep apnea can breathe adequately when awake but experience repeated episodes of upper airway closure when asleep, in particular during REM sleep. Similar to skeletal postural muscles, pharyngeal dilator muscles responsible for maintaining an open upper airway become hypotonic during REM sleep. Unlike spinal motoneurons controlling postural muscles that are inhibited by glycinergic transmission during REM sleep, hypoglossal motoneurons that control the upper airway muscles are inhibited in REM sleep by the combination of monoaminergic disfacilitation and cholinergic inhibition. In this study, we demonstrated how cholinergic signaling inhibits hypoglossal motoneurons through presynaptic and postsynaptic muscarinic receptors. Our results provide a potential mechanism for upper airway hypotonia during REM sleep.

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