Identification of hypothermia-inducing neurons in the preoptic area and activation of them by isoflurane anesthesia and central injection of adenosine.
Erika UchinoIkue Kusumoto-YoshidaHideki KashiwadaniYuichi KanmuraAkira MatsunagaTomoyuki KuwakiPublished in: The journal of physiological sciences : JPS (2024)
Hibernation and torpor are not passive responses caused by external temperature drops and fasting but are active brain functions that lower body temperature. A population of neurons in the preoptic area was recently identified as such active torpor-regulating neurons. We hypothesized that the other hypothermia-inducing maneuvers would also activate these neurons. To test our hypothesis, we first refined the previous observations, examined the brain regions explicitly activated during the falling phase of body temperature using c-Fos expression, and confirmed the preoptic area. Next, we observed long-lasting hypothermia by reactivating torpor-tagged Gq-expressing neurons using the activity tagging and DREADD systems. Finally, we found that about 40-60% of torpor-tagged neurons were activated by succeeding isoflurane anesthesia and by icv administration of an adenosine A1 agonist. Isoflurane-induced and central adenosine-induced hypothermia is, at least in part, an active process mediated by the torpor-regulating neurons in the preoptic area.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord
- cardiac arrest
- brain injury
- high glucose
- poor prognosis
- white matter
- diabetic rats
- type diabetes
- resting state
- adipose tissue
- protein kinase
- metabolic syndrome
- oxidative stress
- skeletal muscle
- endothelial cells
- functional connectivity
- drug induced
- multiple sclerosis
- blood glucose
- binding protein
- blood brain barrier