Airway tone
Airway tone, short for airway smooth muscle tone, is the degree of sustained contractile activation of airway smooth muscle. The airways have a tone baseline, and consequently a baseline level of contraction of their smooth musculature. Airway tone is a key determinant of lung function and the presence of respiratory symptoms in obstructive lung diseases such as asthma, where baseline airway tone is elevated. The upper extreme of the spectrum of airway tone represents bronchoconstriction, wherein the airway smooth muscles are significantly contracted, while the lower extreme represents bronchodilatation, wherein the muscles are relatively relaxed.
While airway tone is related to respiratory airflow and airway caliber insofar as an increase in airway tone decreases airflow due to the airway smooth muscle contraction, the two are not synonymous as airflow is determined by the structural and functional properties of the airways as well as the lung parenchyma in addition to airway tone.
Airway tone and airway resistance are mostly correlated, but adequate upper airway tone is necessary for airflow and airway patency; insufficient upper airway tone during sleep can, for instance, result in obstructive sleep apnea.
Autonomic nervous system signalling
signalling plays a pivotal role in determining airway tone. The innervation of airway smooth musculature varies between the upper and lower airways.Upper airway tone
The pharynx is innervated by cranial nerves VII, IX, XII, while both the pharynx and the larynx are innervated by the vagus nerve.Lower airway tone
Lower airway, bronchial, or bronchus tone is mediated both by the innervation of airway smooth musculature and, possibly, also by the innervation of airway mucosal vasculature. Lower airway smooth muscles are mostly only innervated by the vagus nerve.Cholinergic signalling
Airway smooth muscle is primarily innervated by cholinergic parasympathetic nerves, while its adrenergic sympathetic innervation is sparse to non-existent. Specifically, cholinergic parasympathetic signalling increases the airway tone, meaning the airway tone is proportional to the vagal tone.Despite this overall airway tone-increasing effect, the individual effects of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors expressed by airway muscle cells, of which there are 5 subtypes, M1 through M5, are ambivalent. M3 receptors directly lead to airway smooth muscle contraction, i.e., an increase in airway tone, while M2 receptors expressed by airway neurons suppress the further release of acetylcholine in a negative feedback loop, wherein cholinergic parasympathetic signalling reduces further cholinergic parasympathetic signalling, which may explain the unexpectedly low effectivity of certain non-selective muscarinic receptor antagonists such as ipratropium bromide.
M2 receptors are less functional in asthma, disrupting the negative feedback which normally reduces airway tone, which may play a role in asthmatic airway hyperresponsiveness.
Adrenergic signalling
As mentioned, adrenergic sympathetic innervation of airway smooth muscle is likely insignificant; however, the sympathetic innervation of the airway mucosal vasculature is significant. Airway muscular vasculature controls the flow of nutrients to the airways, the temperature of the airways, as well as the clearance of insoluble particles in the airways, which may play an important role in the activity of inhaled bronchodilators, thus affecting airway reactivity and airway tone changes in obstructive lung diseases.Dopaminergic signalling
There is conflicting evidence regarding dopamine's effect on airway tone in vivo, with some studies reporting bronchoconstriction and others bronchodilatation following dopamine inhalation. In one study, dopamine attenuated the increase in airway tone caused by cholinergic signalling, but exacerbated histaminergic bronchoconstriction, while both signals were attenuated in the present study following the administration of intravenous dopamine. Thus, no conclusion can be drawn at this time.Acute activation of D2 receptors expressed by airway smooth muscle cells inhibits the adenylyl cyclase, lowering cAMP levels, leading to an increase in airway tone. However, their prolonged activation by quinpirole, a D2 and D3 receptor agonist, paradoxically enhances adenylyl cyclase activity, raising cAMP levels, leading to bronchodilatation via phospholipase C and protein kinase C.