Jennifer D. Zwicker
University of Alberta
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jennifer D. Zwicker.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015
Plamena R. Angelova; Vitaliy Kasymov; Isabel N. Christie; Shahriar Sheikhbahaei; Egor Turovsky; Nephtali Marina; Alla Korsak; Jennifer D. Zwicker; X Anja G. Teschemacher; X Gareth L. Ackland; X Gregory D. Funk; Sergey Kasparov; Andrey Y. Abramov; Alexander V. Gourine
In terrestrial mammals, the oxygen storage capacity of the CNS is limited, and neuronal function is rapidly impaired if oxygen supply is interrupted even for a short period of time. However, oxygen tension monitored by the peripheral (arterial) chemoreceptors is not sensitive to regional CNS differences in partial pressure of oxygen (PO2) that reflect variable levels of neuronal activity or local tissue hypoxia, pointing to the necessity of a functional brain oxygen sensor. This experimental animal (rats and mice) study shows that astrocytes, the most numerous brain glial cells, are sensitive to physiological changes in PO2. Astrocytes respond to decreases in PO2 a few millimeters of mercury below normal brain oxygenation with elevations in intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i). The hypoxia sensor of astrocytes resides in the mitochondria in which oxygen is consumed. Physiological decrease in PO2 inhibits astroglial mitochondrial respiration, leading to mitochondrial depolarization, production of free radicals, lipid peroxidation, activation of phospholipase C, IP3 receptors, and release of Ca2+ from the intracellular stores. Hypoxia-induced [Ca2+]i increases in astrocytes trigger fusion of vesicular compartments containing ATP. Blockade of astrocytic signaling by overexpression of ATP-degrading enzymes or targeted astrocyte-specific expression of tetanus toxin light chain (to interfere with vesicular release mechanisms) within the brainstem respiratory rhythm-generating circuits reveals the fundamental physiological role of astroglial oxygen sensitivity; in low-oxygen conditions (environmental hypoxia), this mechanism increases breathing activity even in the absence of peripheral chemoreceptor oxygen sensing. These results demonstrate that astrocytes are functionally specialized CNS oxygen sensors tuned for rapid detection of physiological changes in brain oxygenation. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Most, if not all, animal cells possess mechanisms that allow them to detect decreases in oxygen availability leading to slow-timescale, adaptive changes in gene expression and cell physiology. To date, only two types of mammalian cells have been demonstrated to be specialized for rapid functional oxygen sensing: glomus cells of the carotid body (peripheral respiratory chemoreceptors) that stimulate breathing when oxygenation of the arterial blood decreases; and pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells responsible for hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction to limit perfusion of poorly ventilated regions of the lungs. Results of the present study suggest that there is another specialized oxygen-sensitive cell type in the body, the astrocyte, that is tuned for rapid detection of physiological changes in brain oxygenation.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010
Adrianne G. Huxtable; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Tucaauê S. Alvares; Araya Ruangkittisakul; Xin Fang; Leanne B. Hahn; Elena Posse de Chaves; Glen B. Baker; Klaus Ballanyi; Gregory D. Funk
Glia modulate neuronal activity by releasing transmitters in a process called gliotransmission. The role of this process in controlling the activity of neuronal networks underlying motor behavior is unknown. ATP features prominently in gliotransmission; it also contributes to the homeostatic ventilatory response evoked by low oxygen through mechanisms that likely include excitation of preBötzinger complex (preBötC) neural networks, brainstem centers critical for breathing. We therefore inhibited glial function in rhythmically active inspiratory networks in vitro to determine whether glia contribute to preBötC ATP sensitivity. Glial toxins markedly reduced preBötC responses to ATP, but not other modulators. Furthermore, since preBötC glia responded to ATP with increased intracellular Ca2+ and glutamate release, we conclude that glia contribute to the ATP sensitivity of preBötC networks, and possibly the hypoxic ventilatory response. Data reveal a role for glia in signal processing within brainstem motor networks that may be relevant to similar networks throughout the neuraxis.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009
Adrianne G. Huxtable; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Betty Y. Poon; Silvia Pagliardini; Sebastian Q. Vrouwe; John J. Greer; Gregory D. Funk
ATP released during hypoxia from the ventrolateral medulla activates purinergic receptors (P2Rs) to attenuate the secondary hypoxic depression of breathing by a mechanism that likely involves a P2Y1R-mediated excitation of preBötzinger complex (preBötC) inspiratory rhythm-generating networks. In this study, we used rhythmically active in vitro preparations from embryonic and postnatal rats and ATP microinjection into the rostral ventral respiratory group (rVRG)/preBötC to reveal that these networks are sensitive to ATP when rhythm emerges at embryonic day 17 (E17). The peak frequency elicited by ATP at E19 and postnatally was the same (∼45 bursts/min), but relative sensitivity was threefold greater at E19, reflecting a lower baseline frequency (5.6 ± 0.9 vs 19.0 ± 1.3 bursts/min). Combining microinjection techniques with ATP biosensors revealed that ATP concentration in the rVRG/preBötC falls rapidly as a result of active processes and closely correlates with inspiratory frequency. A phosphate assay established that preBötC-containing tissue punches degrade ATP at rates that increase perinatally. Thus, the agonist profile [ATP/ADP/adenosine (ADO)] produced after ATP release in the rVRG/preBötC will change perinatally. Electrophysiology further established that the ATP metabolite ADP is excitatory and that, in fetal but not postnatal animals, ADO at A1 receptors exerts a tonic depressive action on rhythm, whereas A1 antagonists extend the excitatory action of ATP on inspiratory rhythm. These data demonstrate that ATP is a potent excitatory modulator of the rVRG/preBötC inspiratory network from the time it becomes active and that ATP actions are determined by a dynamic interaction between the actions of ATP at P2 receptors, ectonucleotidases that degrade ATP, and ATP metabolites on P2Y and P1 receptors.
The Journal of Physiology | 2011
Jennifer D. Zwicker; Vishaal Rajani; L. B. Hahn; Gregory D. Funk
Non‐technical summary Hypoxia causes an increase in breathing followed by a secondary depression that is most pronounced, and potentially life‐threatening, in premature infants. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is released in brainstem respiratory networks during hypoxia, where it attenuates the secondary respiratory depression. Mechanisms are unknown but likely to be complex because ATP is degraded by enzymes into ADP, which is excitatory, and adenosine (ADO), which is inhibitory. We demonstrate in mouse, like rat, that ATP in the preBötzinger complex (preBötC), a site critical for inspiratory rhythm generation, increases frequency. Unlike rat, this increase is only observed in mouse if ADO receptors are blocked. Differential ATP sensitivity is likely to reflect that ADO is only inhibitory in mouse, and that mouse preBötC enzymes favour ADO production. Thus, purinergic signalling in preBötC networks appears balanced to favour inhibition in mouse but excitation in rat. Knowledge of purinergic signalling increases our understanding of processes underlying respiratory responses to hypoxia.
The Journal of Physiology | 2017
Vishaal Rajani; Venkatesh Jalubula; Vladimir Rancic; Shahriar Sheikhbahaei; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Silvia Pagliardini; Clayton T. Dickson; Klaus Ballanyi; Sergey Kasparov; Alexander V. Gourine; Gregory D. Funk
The ventilatory response to reduced oxygen (hypoxia) is biphasic, comprising an initial increase in ventilation followed by a secondary depression. Our findings indicate that, during hypoxia, astrocytes in the pre‐Bötzinger complex (preBötC), a critical site of inspiratory rhythm generation, release a gliotransmitter that acts via P2Y1 receptors to stimulate ventilation and reduce the secondary depression. In vitro analyses reveal that ATP excitation of the preBötC involves P2Y1 receptor‐mediated release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. By identifying a role for gliotransmission and the sites, P2 receptor subtype, and signalling mechanisms via which ATP modulates breathing during hypoxia, these data advance our understanding of the mechanisms underlying the hypoxic ventilatory response and highlight the significance of purinergic signalling and gliotransmission in homeostatic control. Clinically, these findings are relevant to conditions in which hypoxia and respiratory depression are implicated, including apnoea of prematurity, sleep disordered breathing and congestive heart failure.
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2014
Jennifer D. Zwicker; Jun Ren; Mark R. Hutchinson; Kenner C. Rice; Linda R. Watkins; John J. Greer; Gregory D. Funk
Opioids activate glia in the central nervous system in part by activating the toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)/myeloid differentiation 2 (MD2) complex. TLR4/MD2-mediated activation of glia by opioids compromises their analgesic actions. Glial activation is also hypothesized as pivotal in opioid-mediated reward and tolerance and as a contributor to opioid-mediated respiratory depression. We tested the contribution of TLR4 to opioid-induced respiratory depression using rhythmically active medullary slices that contain the pre-Bötzinger Complex (preBötC, an important site of respiratory rhythm generation) and adult rats in vivo. Injection with DAMGO (μ-opioid receptor agonist; 50 μM) or bath application of DAMGO (500 nM) or fentanyl (1 μM) slowed frequency recorded from XII nerves to 40%, 40%, or 50% of control, respectively. This DAMGO-mediated frequency inhibition was unaffected by preapplication of lipopolysaccharides from Rhodobacter sphaeroides (a TLR4 antagonist, 2,000 ng/ml) or (+)naloxone (1-10 μM, a TLR4-antagonist). Bath application of (-)naloxone (500 nM; a TLR4 and μ-opioid antagonist), however, rapidly reversed the opioid-mediated frequency decrease. We also compared the opioid-induced respiratory depression in slices in vitro in the absence and presence of bath-applied minocycline (an inhibitor of microglial activation) and in slices prepared from mice injected (ip) 18 h earlier with minocycline or saline. Minocycline had no effect on respiratory depression in vitro. Finally, the respiratory depression evoked in anesthetized rats by tail vein infusion of fentanyl was unaffected by subsequent injection of (+)naloxone, but completely reversed by (-)naloxone. These data indicate that neither activation of microglia in preBötC nor TLR4/MD2-activation contribute to opioid-induced respiratory depression.
The Journal of Physiology | 2017
Vishaal Rajani; Venkatesh Jalubula; Vladimir Rancic; Shahriar Sheikhbahaei; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Silvia Pagliardini; Clayton T. Dickson; Klaus Ballanyi; Sergey Kasparov; Alexander V. Gourine; Gregory D. Funk
The FASEB Journal | 2015
Vishaal Rajani; Shahriar Sheikhbahaei; Nathan Y. Chu; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Elena Posse de Chaves; Silvia Pagliardini; Jeffrey C. Smith; Sergey Kasparov; Alexander V. Gourine; Gregory D. Funk
Archive | 2015
A. Hopp; Eckehard A. E. Stuth; Edward J. Zuperku; Sanda Mustapic; Tomislav Radocaj; Zoran Dogas; Mary M. Heinricher; Ryan S. Phillips; Daniel R. Cleary; Julia W. Nalwalk; Seksiri Arttamangkul; Lindsay B. Hough; Jennifer D. Zwicker; Jun Ren; Mark Hutchinson; Kenner C. Rice; R Linda
Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2011
Jennifer D. Zwicker; Silvia Pagliardini; Sergey Kasparov; Alexander V. Gourine; Gregory D. Funk