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Dive into the research topics where Katherine A. Wilkinson is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine A. Wilkinson.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2009

Characterization of the chemosensitive response of individual solitary complex neurons from adult rats

Nicole L. Nichols; Daniel K. Mulkey; Katherine A. Wilkinson; Frank L. Powell; Jay B. Dean; Robert W. Putnam

We studied the CO(2)/H(+)-chemosensitive responses of individual solitary complex (SC) neurons from adult rats by simultaneously measuring the intracellular pH (pH(i)) and electrical responses to hypercapnic acidosis (HA). SC neurons were recorded using the blind whole cell patch-clamp technique and loading the soma with the pH-sensitive dye pyranine through the patch pipette. We found that SC neurons from adult rats have a lower steady-state pH(i) than SC neurons from neonatal rats. In the presence of chemical and electrical synaptic blockade, adult SC neurons have firing rate responses to HA (percentage of neurons activated or inhibited and the magnitude of response as determined by the chemosensitivity index) that are similar to SC neurons from neonatal rats. They also have a typical response to isohydric hypercapnia, including decreased DeltapH(i), followed by pH(i) recovery, and increased firing rate. Thus, the chemosensitive response of SC neurons from adults is similar to the chemosensitive response of SC neurons from neonatal rats. Because our findings for adults are similar to previously reported values for neurons from neonatal rats, we conclude that intrinsic chemosensitivity is established early in development for SC neurons and is maintained throughout adulthood.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2010

Chronic hypoxia increases the gain of the hypoxic ventilatory response by a mechanism in the central nervous system

Katherine A. Wilkinson; Kimberly A. Huey; B. Dinger; L. He; S. Fidone; Frank L. Powell

We studied the effects of the ventilatory stimulant doxapram to test the hypothesis that chronic hypoxia increases the translation of carotid body afferent input into ventilatory motor efferent output by the central nervous system. Chronic hypoxia (inspired Po(2) = 70 Torr, 2 days) significantly increased the ventilatory response to an intravenous infusion of a high dose of doxapram in conscious, unrestrained rats breathing normoxic or hypoxic gas. The in vitro carotid body response to hypoxia increased with chronic hypoxia, but the response was not increased with a high dose of doxapram. Similarly, the phrenic nerve response to doxapram in anesthetized rats with carotid bodies denervated did not change with 7 days of chronic hypoxia. The results support the hypothesis that chronic hypoxia causes plasticity in the central component of the carotid chemoreceptor ventilatory reflex, which increases the hypoxic ventilatory response. We conclude that doxapram provides a promising tool to study the time course of changes in the central gain of the hypoxic ventilatory response during chronic hypoxia in awake animals and humans.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2009

Chronic hypoxia suppresses the CO2 response of solitary complex (SC) neurons from rats

Nicole L. Nichols; Katherine A. Wilkinson; Frank L. Powell; Jay B. Dean; Robert W. Putnam

We studied the effect of chronic hypobaric hypoxia (CHx; 10-11% O(2)) on the response to hypercapnia (15% CO(2)) of individual solitary complex (SC) neurons from adult rats. We simultaneously measured the intracellular pH and firing rate responses to hypercapnia of SC neurons in superfused medullary slices from control and CHx-adapted adult rats using the blind whole cell patch clamp technique and fluorescence imaging microscopy. We found that CHx caused the percentage of SC neurons inhibited by hypercapnia to significantly increase from about 10% up to about 30%, but did not significantly alter the percentage of SC neurons activated by hypercapnia (50% in control vs. 35% in CHx). Further, the magnitudes of the responses of SC neurons from control rats (chemosensitivity index for activated neurons of 166+/-11% and for inhibited neurons of 45+/-15%) were the same in SC neurons from CHx-adapted rats. This plasticity induced in chemosensitive SC neurons by CHx appears to involve intrinsic changes in neuronal properties since they were the same in synaptic blockade medium.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Characterization of muscle spindle afferents in the adult mouse using an in vitro muscle-nerve preparation.

Katherine A. Wilkinson; Heidi E. Kloefkorn; Shawn Hochman

We utilized an in vitro adult mouse extensor digitorum longus (EDL) nerve-attached preparation to characterize the responses of muscle spindle afferents to ramp-and-hold stretch and sinusoidal vibratory stimuli. Responses were measured at both room (24°C) and muscle body temperature (34°C). Muscle spindle afferent static firing frequencies increased linearly in response to increasing stretch lengths to accurately encode the magnitude of muscle stretch (tested at 2.5%, 5% and 7.5% of resting length [Lo]). Peak firing frequency increased with ramp speeds (20% Lo/sec, 40% Lo/sec, and 60% Lo/sec). As a population, muscle spindle afferents could entrain 1:1 to sinusoidal vibrations throughout the frequency (10–100 Hz) and amplitude ranges tested (5–100 µm). Most units preferentially entrained to vibration frequencies close to their baseline steady-state firing frequencies. Cooling the muscle to 24°C decreased baseline firing frequency and units correspondingly entrained to slower frequency vibrations. The ramp component of stretch generated dynamic firing responses. These responses and related measures of dynamic sensitivity were not able to categorize units as primary (group Ia) or secondary (group II) even when tested with more extreme length changes (10% Lo). We conclude that the population of spindle afferents combines to encode stretch in a smoothly graded manner over the physiological range of lengths and speeds tested. Overall, spindle afferent response properties were comparable to those seen in other species, supporting subsequent use of the mouse genetic model system for studies on spindle function and dysfunction in an isolated muscle-nerve preparation.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2011

Ventilatory effects of substance P-saporin lesions in the nucleus tractus solitarii of chronically hypoxic rats

Katherine A. Wilkinson; Zhenxing Fu; Frank L. Powell

During ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia (VAH), time-dependent increases in ventilation lower Pco(2) levels, and this persists on return to normoxia. We hypothesized that plasticity in the caudal nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) contributes to VAH, as the NTS receives the first synapse from the carotid body chemoreceptor afferents and also contains CO(2)-sensitive neurons. We lesioned cells in the caudal NTS containing the neurokinin-1 receptor by microinjecting the neurotoxin saporin conjugated to substance P and measured ventilatory responses in awake, unrestrained rats 18 days later. Lesions did not affect hypoxic or hypercapnic ventilatory responses in normoxic control rats, in contrast to published reports for similar lesions in other central chemosensitive areas. Also, lesions did not affect the hypercapnic ventilatory response in chronically hypoxic rats (inspired Po(2) = 90 Torr for 7 days). These results suggest functional differences between central chemoreceptor sites. However, lesions significantly increased ventilation in normoxia or acute hypoxia in chronically hypoxic rats. Hence, chronic hypoxia increases an inhibitory effect of neurokinin-1 receptor neurons in the NTS on ventilatory drive, indicating that these neurons contribute to plasticity during chronic hypoxia, although such plasticity does not explain VAH.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014

An In Vitro Adult Mouse Muscle-nerve Preparation for Studying the Firing Properties of Muscle Afferents

Joy A. Franco; Heidi E. Kloefkorn; Shawn Hochman; Katherine A. Wilkinson

Muscle sensory neurons innervating muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs encode length and force changes essential to proprioception. Additional afferent fibers monitor other characteristics of the muscle environment, including metabolite buildup, temperature, and nociceptive stimuli. Overall, abnormal activation of sensory neurons can lead to movement disorders or chronic pain syndromes. We describe the isolation of the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle and nerve for in vitro study of stretch-evoked afferent responses in the adult mouse. Sensory activity is recorded from the nerve with a suction electrode and individual afferents can be analyzed using spike sorting software. In vitro preparations allow for well controlled studies on sensory afferents without the potential confounds of anesthesia or altered muscle perfusion. Here we describe a protocol to identify and test the response of muscle spindle afferents to stretch. Importantly, this preparation also supports the study of other subtypes of muscle afferents, response properties following drug application and the incorporation of powerful genetic approaches and disease models in mice.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Diet induced obesity alters muscle spindle afferent function in adult mice

Lubayna S. Elahi; Krystle Shamai; Adam M. Abtahie; Adam M. Cai; Shreejit Padmanabhan; Martina Bremer; Katherine A. Wilkinson

Populations with obesity are more likely to fall and exhibit balance instability. The reason for this is likely multifactorial, but there is some evidence that sensory function is impaired during obesity. We tested the hypothesis that muscle proprioceptor function is compromised in a mouse model of diet induced obesity. An in vitro muscle-nerve preparation was used to record muscle spindle afferent responses to physiological stretch and sinusoidal vibration. We compared the responses of C57/Bl6 male and female mice on a control diet (10% kcal fat) with those eating a high fat diet (HFD; 60% kcal fat) for 10 weeks (final age 14–15 weeks old). Following HFD feeding, adult mice of both sexes exhibited decreased muscle spindle afferent responses to muscle movement. Muscle spindle afferent firing rates during the plateau phase of stretch were significantly lower in both male and female HFD animals as were two measures of dynamic sensitivity (dynamic peak and dynamic index). Muscle spindle afferents in male mice on a HFD were also significantly less likely to entrain to vibration. Due to the importance of muscle spindle afferents to proprioception and motor control, decreased muscle spindle afferent responsiveness may contribute to balance instability during obesity.


Integrative and Comparative Biology | 2007

Respiratory plasticity in response to changes in oxygen supply and demand

Ryan W. Bavis; Frank L. Powell; Aidan Bradford; Connie C. W. Hsia; Juha E. Peltonen; Jorge Soliz; Bettina Zeis; Elizabeth K. Fergusson; Zhenxing Fu; Max Gassmann; Cindy B. Kim; Jana Maurer; Michelle McGuire; Brooke M. Miller; Ken D. O'Halloran; Rdiger J. Paul; Stephen G. Reid; Heikki Rusko; Heikki O. Tikkanen; Katherine A. Wilkinson


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004

Effects of postural changes and vestibular lesions on genioglossal muscle activity in conscious cats

L. A. Cotter; H. E. Arendt; Stephen P. Cass; B. J. Jian; D. F. Mays; C. J. Olsheski; Katherine A. Wilkinson; Bill J. Yates


Archive | 2009

Chronic Hypoxia Decreases Response to Central Chemoreceptor Stimulation in the Nucleus Tractus Solitarius (NTS)

Katherine A. Wilkinson; Nicole L. Nichols; Robert W. Putnam; Frank L. Powell

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Zhenxing Fu

University of California

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Nicole L. Nichols

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Connie C. W. Hsia

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Curtis A. Smith

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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