Publication | Open Access
Regulation of breathing by CO <sub>2</sub> requires the proton-activated receptor GPR4 in retrotrapezoid nucleus neurons
228
Citations
38
References
2015
Year
Molecular NeuroscienceMolecular PhysiologySignal TransductionNeurophysiologyPhysiological RegulationBlood GasPhysiologyProton-activated Receptor Gpr4Respiration (Physiology)NeuroscienceNervous SystemRetrotrapezoid Nucleus NeuronsMedicineCellular PhysiologyData Identify Gpr4Social SciencesRespiratory NeurobiologyIntegrative Physiology
Blood gas and tissue pH regulation depend on the ability of the brain to sense CO2 and/or H(+) and alter breathing appropriately, a homeostatic process called central respiratory chemosensitivity. We show that selective expression of the proton-activated receptor GPR4 in chemosensory neurons of the mouse retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) is required for CO2-stimulated breathing. Genetic deletion of GPR4 disrupted acidosis-dependent activation of RTN neurons, increased apnea frequency, and blunted ventilatory responses to CO2. Reintroduction of GPR4 into RTN neurons restored CO2-dependent RTN neuronal activation and rescued the ventilatory phenotype. Additional elimination of TASK-2 (K(2P)5), a pH-sensitive K(+) channel expressed in RTN neurons, essentially abolished the ventilatory response to CO2. The data identify GPR4 and TASK-2 as distinct, parallel, and essential central mediators of respiratory chemosensitivity.
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