A Molecularly Defined Medullary Network for Control of Respiratory Homeostasis
Tianjiao Deng, Xinyi Jing, Liuqi Shao, Yakun Wang, Congrui Fu, Hongxiao Yu, Xiaoyi Wang, Xue Zhao, Fanrao Kong, Yake Ji, Xiaochen Tian, Wei He, Shaolan Bi, Luo Shi, Hanqiao Wang, Fang Yuan, Sheng Wang
Abstract
Abstract The dynamic interaction between central respiratory chemoreceptors and the respiratory central pattern generator constitutes a critical homeostatic axis for stabilizing breathing rhythm and pattern, yet its circuit‐level organization remains poorly characterized. Here, the functional connectivity between two key medullary hubs: the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) and the preBötzinger complex (preBötC) are systematically investigated. These findings delineate a medullary network primarily comprising Phox2b‐expressing NTS neurons (NTS Phox2b ), GABAergic NTS neurons (NTS GABA ), and somatostatin (SST)‐expressing preBötC neurons (preBötC SST ). Photostimulation of NTS Phox2b neurons projecting to the preBötC potently amplifies baseline ventilation, whereas genetic ablation of these neurons or knockout of their transient receptor potential channel 5 (TRPC5) significantly blunts the CO 2 ‐stimulated ventilatory responses. Conversely, NTS GABA neuron stimulation inhibits or halts breathing partially via monosynaptic inhibition of NTS Phox2b neurons projecting to the preBötC. Additionally, photostimulation of preBötC SST neurons projecting to the NTS drives deep and slow breathing through coordinated modulation of NTS GABA and NTS Phox2b neurons. These findings collectively identify an important medullary network that integrates chemosensory feedback with respiratory motor output, enabling dynamic tuning of breathing patterns to metabolic demands.