Pharmacological, but not genetic, alteration of neural Epo modifies the CO2/H+ central chemosensitivity in postnatal mice

2017 
Abstract Cerebral erythropoietin (Epo) plays a crucial role for respiratory control in newborn rodents. We showed previously that soluble Epo receptor (sEpoR: an Epo antagonist) reduces basal ventilation and hypoxic hyperventilation at postnatal day 10 (P10) and in adult mice. However, at these ages (P10 and adulthood), Epo had no effect on central chemosensitivity. Nevertheless, it is known that the sensitivity to CO 2 /H + during the mammalian respiratory network maturation process is age-dependent. Accordingly, in this study we wanted to test the hypothesis that cerebral Epo is involved in the breathing stimulation induced by the activation of central CO 2 /H + chemoreceptors at earlier postnatal ages. To this end, en bloc brainstem-spinal cord preparations were obtained from P4 mice and the fictive breathing response to CO 2 -induced acidosis or metabolic acidosis was analyzed. This age (P4) was chosen because previous research from our laboratory showed that Epo altered (in a dose- and time-dependent manner) the fictive ventilation elicited in brainstem-spinal cord preparations. Moreover, as it was observed that peripheral chemoreceptors determined the respiratory sensitivity of central chemoreceptors to CO 2 , the use of this technique restricts our observations to central modulation. Our results did not show differences between preparations from control and transgenic animals (Tg21: overexpressing cerebral Epo; Epo-TAg h : cerebral Epo deficient mice). However, when Tg21 brainstem preparations were incubated for 1 h with sEpoR, or with inhibitors of ERK/Akt (thus blocking the activation of the Epo molecular pathway), the fictive breathing response to CO 2 -induced acidosis was blunted. Our data suggest that variation of the Epo/sEpoR ratio is central to breathing modulation during CO 2 challenges, and calls attention to clinical perspectives based on the use of Epo drugs at birth in hypoventilation cases.
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