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Autonomic control of heart rate is virtually independent of temperature but seems related to the neuroanatomy of the efferent vagal supply to the heart in the bullfrog, Lithobathes catesbeianus
Authors:Edwin W. Taylor  Nini Skovgaard  Cleo A.C. Leite  Marina Sartori  Gabrielle S. de Paula  Augusto S. Abe
Affiliation:1. Departamento Zoologica, UNESP, Rio Claro, SP, Brazil;2. School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, UK;3. Zoophysiology, Aarhus University, Denmark
Abstract:Bullfrogs, Lithobathes catesbeianus, bearing a femoral artery cannula were held at 3 temperatures (10, 20 and 30 °C) for 24 h. Changes in heart rate were recorded before and after injection of cholinergic and adrenergic antagonists. Normal heart rate doubled for each temperature increment. Adrenergic tone on the heart varied around 20% at all 3 temperatures but cholinergic tone increased from −5% to 10% between 10 and 30 °C. In contrast, cholinergic tone increased from 75% at 5 °C to 329% at 25 °C in Xenopus laevis. Injection of the neural tracer True Blue into the cervical vagus of the bullfrog revealed a single location for vagal preganglionic neurons (VPN) in the dorsal vagal motor nucleus (DVN), while Xenopus had 30% of its VPN in a ventro-lateral group outside the DVN. Broader comparative studies have suggested that differences in the extent of vagal tone may relate to the location of VPN in the brainstem and this may be the case in these amphibians.
Keywords:CRI, cardiorespiratory interactions   CVPN, cardiac vagal preganglionic neurons   DVN, dorsal vagal motor nucleus   NA, nucleus ambiguus   RSA, respiratory sinus arrythmia   VPN, vagal preganglionic neurons
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