Intra-carotid body inter-cellular communication

J R Soc N Z. 2022 May 30;53(3):332-361. doi: 10.1080/03036758.2022.2079681. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The classic peripheral chemoreflex response is a critical homeostatic mechanism. In healthy individuals, appropriate chemoreflex responses are triggered by acute activation of the carotid body - the principal chemosensory organ in mammals. However, the aberrant chronic activation of the carotid body can drive the elevated sympathetic activity underlying cardio-respiratory diseases such as hypertension, diabetes and heart failure. Carotid body resection induces intolerable side effects and so understanding how to modulate carotid body output without removing it, and whilst maintaining the physiological chemoreflex response, represents the next logical next step in the development of effective clinical interventions. By definition, excessive carotid body output must result from altered intra-carotid body inter-cellular communication. Alongside the canonical synaptic transmission from glomus cells to petrosal afferents, many other modes of information exchange in the carotid body have been identified, for example bidirectional signalling between type I and type II cells via ATP-induced ATP release, as well as electrical communication via gap junctions. Thus, herein we review the carotid body as an integrated circuit, discussing a variety of different inter-cellular signalling mechanisms and highlighting those that are potentially relevant to its pathological hyperactivity in disease with the aim of identifying novel therapeutic targets.

Keywords: Carotid body; chemoreflex; chemosensation; glomus cells; inter-cellular signalling; sustentacular cells; type I cells; type II cells; visceral sensory neurons.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This work was supported by Health Research Council of New Zealand: [Grant Number 19/687]; Sidney Taylor Trust: [Grant Number].