Publication: Nitric oxide controls excitatory/inhibitory balance in the hypoglossal nucleus during early postnatal development.
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Identifiers
Date
2020-10-17
Authors
Portillo, Federico
Moreno-Lopez, Bernardo
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Abstract
Synaptic remodeling during early postnatal development lies behind neuronal networks refinement and nervous system maturation. In particular, the respiratory system is immature at birth and is subjected to significant postnatal development. In this context, the excitatory/inhibitory balance dramatically changes in the respiratory-related hypoglossal nucleus (HN) during the 3 perinatal weeks. Since, development abnormalities of hypoglossal motor neurons (HMNs) are associated with sudden infant death syndrome and obstructive sleep apnea, deciphering molecular partners behind synaptic remodeling in the HN is of basic and clinical relevance. Interestingly, a transient expression of the neuronal isoform of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS) occurs in HMNs at neonatal stage that disappears before postnatal day 21 (P21). NO, in turn, is a determining factor for synaptic refinement in several physiopathological conditions. Here, intracerebroventricular chronic administration (P7-P21) of the broad spectrum NOS inhibitor L-NAME (N(ω)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester) differentially affected excitatory and inhibitory rearrangement during this neonatal interval in the rat. Whilst L-NAME led to a reduction in the number of excitatory structures, inhibitory synaptic puncta were increased at P21 in comparison to administration of the inactive stereoisomer D-NAME. Finally, L-NAME decreased levels of the phosphorylated form of myosin light chain in the nucleus, which is known to regulate the actomyosin contraction apparatus. These outcomes indicate that physiologically synthesized NO modulates excitatory/inhibitory balance during early postnatal development by acting as an anti-synaptotrophic and/or synaptotoxic factor for inhibitory synapses, and as a synaptotrophin for excitatory ones. The mechanism of action could rely on the modulation of the actomyosin contraction apparatus.
Description
MeSH Terms
Animals
Brain stem
Female
Membrane glycoproteins
Motor neurons
Nitric oxide synthase type I
Rats, Wistar
Receptors, interleukin-1
Vesicular glutamate transport protein 2
Vesicular inhibitory amino acid transport proteins
Brain stem
Female
Membrane glycoproteins
Motor neurons
Nitric oxide synthase type I
Rats, Wistar
Receptors, interleukin-1
Vesicular glutamate transport protein 2
Vesicular inhibitory amino acid transport proteins
DeCS Terms
Glicoproteínas de membrana
Neuronas motoras
Proteína 2 de transporte vesicular de glutamato
Proteínas del transporte vesicular de aminoácidos inhibidores
Ratas Wistar
Receptores de interleucina-1
Tronco encefálico
Neuronas motoras
Proteína 2 de transporte vesicular de glutamato
Proteínas del transporte vesicular de aminoácidos inhibidores
Ratas Wistar
Receptores de interleucina-1
Tronco encefálico
CIE Terms
Keywords
Myosin light chain, Nitric oxide, Synaptic refinement, Synaptotoxin, Synaptotrophin, VGAT, VGLUT2
Citation
Portillo F, Moreno-López B. Nitric oxide controls excitatory/inhibitory balance in the hypoglossal nucleus during early postnatal development. Brain Struct Funct. 2020 Dec;225(9):2871-2884