Probabilistic, spinally-gated control of bladder pressure and autonomous micturition by barrington’s nucleus crh neurons

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Abstract

Micturition requires precise control of bladder and urethral sphincter via parasympathetic, sympathetic and somatic motoneurons. This involves a spino-bulbospinal control circuit incorporating Barrington’s nucleus in the pons (Barr). Ponto-spinal glutamatergic neurons that express corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) form one of the largest Barr cell populations. BarrCRH neurons can generate bladder contractions, but it is unknown whether they act as a simple switch or provide a high-fidelity pre-parasympathetic motor drive and whether their activation can actually trigger voids. Combined opto-and chemo-genetic manipulations along with multisite extracellular recordings in urethane anaesthetised CRHCre mice show that BarrCRH neurons provide a probabilistic drive that generates co-ordinated voids or non-voiding contractions depending on the phase of the micturition cycle. CRH itself provides negative feedback regulation of this process. These findings inform a new inferential model of autonomous micturition and emphasise the importance of the state of the spinal gating circuit in the generation of voiding.

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Ito, H., Sales, A. C., Fry, C. H., Kanai, A. J., Drake, M. J., & Pickering, A. E. (2020). Probabilistic, spinally-gated control of bladder pressure and autonomous micturition by barrington’s nucleus crh neurons. ELife, 9. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.56605

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