Cholinergic collaterals arising from noradrenergic sympathetic neurons in mice

Courtney Clyburn, Ming Hua Li, Susan L. Ingram, Michael C. Andresen, Beth A. Habecker

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Abstract: The sympathetic nervous system vitally regulates autonomic functions, including cardiac activity. Postganglionic neurons of the sympathetic chain ganglia relay signals from the central nervous system to autonomic peripheral targets. Disrupting this flow of information often dysregulates organ function and leads to poor health outcomes. Despite the importance of these sympathetic neurons, fundamental aspects of the neurocircuitry within peripheral ganglia remain poorly understood. Conventionally, simple monosynaptic cholinergic pathways from preganglionic neurons are thought to activate postganglionic sympathetic neurons. However, early studies suggested more complex neurocircuits may be present within sympathetic ganglia. The present study recorded synaptic responses in sympathetic stellate ganglia neurons following electrical activation of the pre- and postganglionic nerve trunks and used genetic strategies to assess the presence of collateral projections between postganglionic neurons of the stellate ganglia. Orthograde activation of the preganglionic nerve trunk, T-2, uncovered high jitter synaptic latencies consistent with polysynaptic connections. Pharmacological inhibition of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors with hexamethonium blocked all synaptic events. To confirm that high jitter, polysynaptic events were due to the presence of cholinergic collaterals from postganglionic neurons within the stellate ganglion, we knocked out choline acetyltransferase in adult noradrenergic neurons. This genetic knockout eliminated orthograde high jitter synaptic events and EPSCs evoked by retrograde activation. These findings suggest that cholinergic collateral projections arise from noradrenergic neurons within sympathetic ganglia. Identifying the contributions of collateral excitation to normal physiology and pathophysiology is an important area of future study and may offer novel therapeutic targets for the treatment of autonomic imbalance. (Figure presented.). Key points: Electrical stimulation of a preganglionic nerve trunk evoked fast synaptic transmission in stellate ganglion neurons with low and high jitter latencies. Retrograde stimulation of a postganglionic nerve trunk evoked direct, all-or-none action currents and delayed nicotinic EPSCs indistinguishable from orthogradely-evoked EPSCs in stellate neurons. Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor blockade prevented all spontaneous and evoked synaptic activity. Knockout of acetylcholine production in noradrenergic neurons eliminated all retrogradely-evoked EPSCs but did not change retrograde action currents, indicating that noradrenergic neurons have cholinergic collaterals connecting neurons within the stellate ganglion.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1247-1264
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Physiology
Volume601
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • acetylcholine
  • co-transmission
  • collaterals
  • neurocircuits
  • sympathetic ganglia
  • synaptic inputs

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Physiology

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