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Kölliker-Fuse Nucleus Neurons

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Kölliker-Fuse Nucleus Neurons

Overview

The Kölliker-Fuse nucleus (KF) is a specialized brainstem region located within the dorsolateral tegmentum of the upper pons, positioned medial to the parabrachial nucleus. This anatomically distinct neuronal population comprises predominantly GABAergic (inhibitory) and glutamatergic (excitatory) neurons that form critical components of respiratory and autonomic control circuits. The KF nucleus was first characterized anatomically in the 19th century and has emerged as a significant focus in neurodegeneration research due to its involvement in motor control, breathing regulation, and vulnerability to pathological processes underlying neurodegenerative diseases. The nucleus receives convergent inputs from multiple brainstem regions and projects widely throughout the central nervous system, positioning it as a critical integrator of vital physiological functions.

Function/Biology

Kölliker-Fuse neurons perform multiple integrated functions essential for survival. Primarily, they regulate respiratory rhythm generation and control, working in concert with the pre-Bötzinger complex and other pontine respiratory groups to modulate breathing patterns during different behavioral states, including sleep-wake transitions and response to hypercapnia. The KF nucleus contains specialized expiratory neurons that fine-tune respiratory motor output through connections with lower medullary respiratory nuclei and spinal respiratory motoneurons.

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