Timothy W. Bailey
Oregon Health & Science University
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Featured researches published by Timothy W. Bailey.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Young Ho Jin; Timothy W. Bailey; Bai Yan Li; John H. Schild; Michael C. Andresen
Vanilloid (VR1) and purinergic (P2X) receptors are found in cranial afferent neurons in nodose ganglia and their central terminations within the solitary tract nucleus (NTS), but little is known about their function. We mechanically dissociated dorsomedial NTS neurons to preserve attached native synapses and tested for VR1 and P2X function primarily in spindle-shaped neurons resembling intact second-order neurons. All neurons (n = 95) exhibited spontaneous glutamate (EPSCs) and GABA (IPSCs)-mediated synaptic currents. VR1 agonist capsaicin (CAP; 100 nm) reversibly increased EPSC frequency, effects blocked by capsazepine. ATP (100 μm) increased EPSC frequency, actions blocked by P2X antagonist pyridoxalphosphate-6-azophenyl-2′, 4′-disulfonic acid (PPADS; 20 μm). In all CAP-resistant neurons, P2X agonist αβ-methylene-ATP (αβ-m-ATP) increased EPSC frequency. Neither CAP nor αβ-m-ATP altered EPSC amplitudes, kinetics, or holding currents. Thus, activation of VR1 and P2X receptors selectively facilitated presynaptic glutamate release on different NTS neurons. PPADS and 2′,3′-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)-ATP blocked αβ-m-ATP responses, but P2X1-selective antagonist NF023 (8,8′-[carbonylbis (imino-3,1-phenylene carbonylimino)]bis-1,3,5-naphthalenetrisulfonic acid) did not. The pharmacological profile and transient kinetics of ATP responses are consistent with P2X3 homomeric receptors. TTX and Cd2+ did not eliminate agonist-evoked EPSC frequency increases, suggesting that voltage-gated sodium and calcium channels are not required. In nodose ganglia, CAP but not αβ-m-ATP evoked inward currents in slow conducting neurons and the converse pattern in myelinated, rapidly conducting neurons (n = 14). Together, results are consistent with segregation of glutamatergic terminals into either P2X sensitive or VR1 sensitive that correspondingly identify myelinated and unmyelinated afferent pathways at the NTS.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005
Suzanne M. Appleyard; Timothy W. Bailey; Mark W. Doyle; Young Ho Jin; James L. Smart; Malcolm J. Low; Michael C. Andresen
The nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) receives dense terminations from cranial visceral afferents, including those from the gastrointestinal (GI) system. Although the NTS integrates peripheral satiety signals and relays this signal to central feeding centers, little is known about which NTS neurons are involved or what mechanisms are responsible. Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons are good candidates for GI integration, because disruption of the POMC gene leads to severe obesity and hyperphagia. Here, we used POMC-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) transgenic mice to identify NTS POMC neurons. Intraperitoneal administration of cholecystokinin (CCK) induced c-fos gene expression in NTS POMC-EGFP neurons, suggesting that they are activated by afferents stimulated by the satiety hormone. We tested the synaptic relationship of these neurons to visceral afferents and their modulation by CCK and opioids using patch recordings in horizontal brain slices. Electrical activation of the solitary tract (ST) evoked EPSCs in NTS POMC-EGFP neurons. The invariant latencies, low failure rates, and substantial paired-pulse depression of the ST-evoked EPSCs indicate that NTS POMC-EGFP neurons are second-order neurons directly contacted by afferent terminals. The EPSCs were blocked by the glutamate antagonist 2,3-dihydroxy-6-nitro-7-sulfonyl-benzo[f]quinoxaline. CCK increased the amplitude of the ST-stimulated EPSCs and the frequency of miniature EPSCs, effects attenuated by the CCK1 receptor antagonist lorglumide. In contrast, the orexigenic opioid agonists [d-Ala(2), N-Me-Phe(4), Gly-ol(5)]-enkephalin and met-enkephalin inhibited both ST-stimulated EPSCs and the frequency of miniature EPSCs. These findings identify a potential satiety pathway in which visceral afferents directly activate NTS POMC-EGFP neurons with excitatory inputs that are appropriately modulated by appetite regulators.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Timothy W. Bailey; Sam M. Hermes; Michael C. Andresen; Sue A. Aicher
Cranial visceral afferents activate central pathways that mediate systemic homeostatic processes. Afferent information arrives in the brainstem nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) and is relayed to other CNS sites for integration into autonomic responses and complex behaviors. Little is known about the organization or nature of processing within NTS. We injected fluorescent retrograde tracers into two nuclei to identify neurons that project to sites involved in autonomic regulation: the caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM) or paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN). We found distinct differences in synaptic connections and performance in the afferent path through NTS to these neurons. Anatomical studies using confocal and electron microscopy found prominent, primary afferent synapses directly on somata and dendrites of CVLM-projecting NTS neurons identifying them as second-order neurons. In brainstem slices, afferent activation evoked large, constant latency EPSCs in CVLM-projecting NTS neurons that were consistent with the precise timing and rare failures of monosynaptic contacts on second-order neurons. In contrast, most PVN-projecting NTS neurons lacked direct afferent input and responded to afferent stimuli with highly variable, intermittently failing synaptic responses, indicating polysynaptic pathways to higher-order neurons. The afferent-evoked EPSCs in most PVN-projecting NTS neurons were smaller and unreliable but also often included multiple, convergent polysynaptic responses not observed in CVLM-projecting neurons. A few PVN-projecting NTS neurons had monosynaptic EPSC characteristics. Together, we found that cranial visceral afferent pathways are structured distinctly within NTS depending on the projection target. Such, intra-NTS pathway architecture will substantially impact performance of autonomic or neuroendocrine reflex arcs.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Timothy W. Bailey; Young Ho Jin; Mark W. Doyle; Stephen M. Smith; Michael C. Andresen
The hypothalamus coordinates autonomic responses in part through arginine vasopressin (AVP) released in medial nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS). However, the mechanisms and sites of AVP action within NTS pathways are uncertain. In brainstem slices, we activated solitary tract (ST) primary afferents to release glutamate and tested whether AVP modulated synaptic transmission to second-order neurons. NTS neurons were classified as second order by ST synaptic characteristics or the presence of anterograde tracers from peripheral baroreceptor afferents. Stimulus recruitment curves indicated ST-EPSCs on individual neurons were evoked by stimulation of single ST axons. Variance–mean (V–M) analysis of ST-EPSCs in individual neurons revealed uniformly high release probability (p ∼ 0.9) from an average of 19 release sites (N) and a quantal size (q) of 34.0 ± 4.7 pA. In 26 of 49 neurons, AVP inhibited afferent synaptic transmission. In most neurons, AVP reduced ST-EPSC amplitudes (n = 20) by decreasing p to 0.65, whereas q, N, and conduction times were unaffected. The V1a antagonist SR49059 alone decreased ST-EPSC V and increased M, suggesting tonic AVP actions, and blocked exogenous AVP action (n = 4). In other neurons with identical ST release properties, AVP induced synaptic failures and increased conduction time without altering the V–M relationship of successful ST-EPSCs (n = 6). Interestingly, frequency-depressed ST-EPSCs were not affected by AVP. AVP failed to alter holding or voltage-dependent potassium currents. Thus, AVP regulates NTS neurons by two distinct novel and state-dependent mechanisms: one, an analog, graded presynaptic inhibition of terminal glutamate release and the other, a binary, extraterminal block of conducted excitation.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2008
Timothy W. Bailey; Suzanne M. Appleyard; Young Ho Jin; Michael C. Andresen
Cranial visceral afferents enter the brain at the solitary tract nucleus (NTS). GABAergic neurons are scattered throughout the NTS, but their relation to solitary tract (ST) afferent pathways is imprecisely known. We hypothesized that most GABAergic NTS neurons would be connected only indirectly to the ST. We identified GABAergic neurons in brain stem horizontal slices using transgenic mice in which enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression was linked to glutamic acid decarboxylase expression (GAD(+)). Finely graded electrical shocks to ST recruit ST-synchronized synaptic events with all-or-none thresholds and individual waveforms did not change with greater suprathreshold intensities--evidence consistent with initiation by single afferent axons. Most (approximately 70%) GAD(+) neurons received ST-evoked excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) that had minimally variant latencies (jitter, SD of latency <200 micros) and waveforms consistent with single, direct ST connections (i.e., monosynaptic). Increasing stimulus intensity evoked additional ST-synchronized synaptic responses with jitters >200 micros including inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs), indicating indirect connections (polysynaptic). Shocks of suprathreshold intensity delivered adjacent (50-300 microm) to the ST failed to excite non-ST inputs to second-order neurons, suggesting a paucity of axons passing near to ST that connected to these neurons. Despite expectations, we found similar ST synaptic patterns in GAD(+) and unlabeled neurons. Generally, ST information that arrived indirectly had small amplitudes (EPSCs and IPSCs) and frequency-dependent failures that reached >50% for IPSCs to bursts of stimuli. This ST afferent pathway organization is strongly use-dependent--a property that may tune signal propagation within and beyond NTS.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2004
Mark W. Doyle; Timothy W. Bailey; Young Ho Jin; Suzanne M. Appleyard; Malcolm J. Low; Michael C. Andresen
The indistinct regional anatomy and intermixing of second order neurons with projection and interneurons make cellular studies more difficult within the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS). Here, we outline experimental strategies to join in vitro electrophysiological with neuroanatomical protocols to discriminate specific subpopulations of NTS neurons. Horizontally cutting the brain stem produces slices in which electrical activation of the solitary tract (ST) is free of local interneuron contamination. Such ST excitatory synaptic currents (EPSCs) functionally identify second order NTS neurons by their minimal variation of latency (jitter). Sapphire blades, cold cutting temperatures and a mechanically stable microtome were critical to consistently obtain viable slices that were optimized for infrared and fluorescence microscopy. Anterogradely transported carbocyanine dye implanted on the aortic depressor nerve anatomically identified second order NTS neurons and their ST synaptic performance conformed to the minimal jitter signature of second order neurons. Retrograde tracers and green fluorescent protein labeled neurons afford two additional promising approaches for discriminating NTS neuron phenotypes in broader system contexts. Detailed methods and troubleshooting are described. Coupling tracing techniques with electrophysiology adds important new dimensions to NTS studies and such strategies provide bridging information between cellular mechanisms, neuroanatomy and systems integration.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
Michael C. Andresen; Mark W. Doyle; Young-Ho Jin; Timothy W. Bailey
Abstract: The autonomic nervous system makes important contributions to the homeostatic regulation of the heart and blood vessels through arterial baroreflexes, and yet our understanding of the central nervous system mechanisms is limited. The sensory synapse of baroreceptors in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) is unique because its participation is obligatory in the baroreflex. Here we describe experiments targeting this synapse to provide greater understanding of the cellular mechanisms at the earliest stages of the baroreflex. Our approach utilizes electrophysiology, pharmacology, and anatomical tracers to identify and evaluate key elements of the sensory information processing in NTS.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Young Ho Jin; Timothy W. Bailey; Michael C. Andresen
The balance between excitation and inhibition dictates central integration. Glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotransmission dominate this process. Cranial primary afferents enter the brainstem to release glutamate (Glu) onto second-order neurons within the caudal nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) to initiate autonomic reflexes. The simplest pathways for these reflexes contain as few as two central neurons, but display robust frequency-dependent behavior. Within NTS, multiple metabotropic Glu receptors (mGluRs) are present, but their roles are poorly understood. Using synaptically discriminated second-order NTS neurons in brainstem slices and mechanically dissociated NTS neurons with intact boutons, we show that Glu differentially controls GABA release via distinct presynaptic mGluRs. In second-order NTS neurons recorded in slices, activation of primary afferents at frequencies as low as 10 shocks per second released sufficient Glu to alter rates of spontaneous IPSCs (sIPSCs). In both approaches, group I mGluRs increased GABA release in some neurons, but, on different neurons, group II and group III mGluRs decreased the sIPSC rate. mGluR actions were remarkably rapid, with onset and reversal beginning within 100 msec. In all cases, mGluR actions were exclusively presynaptic, and mGluRs did not alter postsynaptic properties in second-order neurons in either slices or isolated neurons. Tests with capsaicin and αβ-methylene ATP suggest that myelinated and unmyelinated afferent pathways engage both mGluR-GABA mechanisms. Afferent Glu spillover provides heterosynaptic cross talk with GABAergic inhibition in NTS. This process may critically shape the dynamic character and use dependence for cranial afferent transmission at the first stage of autonomic reflexes.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2004
Michael C. Andresen; Mark W. Doyle; Timothy W. Bailey; Young-Ho Jin
Visceral afferents send information via cranial nerves to the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS). The NTS is the initial step of information processing that culminates in homeostatic reflex responses. Recent evidence suggests that strong afferent synaptic responses in the NTS are most often modulated by depression and this forms a basic principle of central integration of these autonomic pathways. The visceral afferent synapse is uncommonly powerful at the NTS with large unitary response amplitudes and depression rather than facilitation at moderate to high frequencies of activation. Substantial signal depression occurs through multiple mechanisms at this very first brainstem synapse onto second order NTS neurons. This review highlights new approaches to the study of these basic processes featuring patch clamp recordings in NTS brain slices and optical techniques with fluorescent tracers. The vanilloid receptor agonist, capsaicin, distinguishes two classes of second order neurons (capsaicin sensitive or capsaicin resistant) that appear to reflect unmyelinated and myelinated afferent pathways. The differences in cellular properties of these two classes of NTS neurons indicate clear functional differentiation at both the pre- and postsynaptic portions of these first synapses. By virtue of their position at the earliest stage of these pathways, such mechanistic differences probably impart important differentiation in the performance over the entire reflex pathways.
The Journal of Physiology | 2007
Timothy W. Bailey; Sam M. Hermes; Kelsey L. Whittier; Sue A. Aicher; Michael C. Andresen
The solitary tract nucleus (NTS) conveys visceral information to diverse central networks involved in homeostatic regulation. Although afferent information content arriving at various CNS sites varies substantially, little is known about the contribution of processing within the NTS to these differences. Using retrograde dyes to identify specific NTS projection neurons, we recently reported that solitary tract (ST) afferents directly contact NTS neurons projecting to caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM) but largely only indirectly contact neurons projecting to the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Since intrinsic properties impact information transmission, here we evaluated potassium channel expression and somatodendritic morphology of projection neurons and their relation to afferent information output directed to PVN or CVLM pathways. In slices, tracer‐identified projection neurons were classified as directly or indirectly (polysynaptically) coupled to ST afferents by EPSC latency characteristics (directly coupled, jitter < 200 μs). In each neuron, voltage‐dependent potassium currents (IK) were evaluated and, in representative neurons, biocytin‐filled structures were quantified. Both CVLM‐ and PVN‐projecting neurons had similar, tetraethylammonium‐sensitive IK. However, only PVN‐projecting NTS neurons displayed large transient, 4aminopyridine‐sensitive, A‐type currents (IKA). PVN‐projecting neurons had larger cell bodies with more elaborate dendritic morphology than CVLM‐projecting neurons. ST shocks faithfully (> 75%) triggered action potentials in CVLM‐projecting neurons but spike output was uniformly low (< 20%) in PVN‐projecting neurons. Pre‐conditioning hyperpolarization removed IKA inactivation and attenuated ST‐evoked spike generation along PVN but not CVLM pathways. Thus, multiple differences in structure, organization, synaptic transmission and ion channel expression tune the overall fidelity of afferent signals that reach these destinations.