Literature DB >> 8234302

Central oxytocin inhibition of salt appetite in rats: evidence for differential sensing of plasma sodium and osmolality.

R E Blackburn1, W K Samson, R J Fulton, E M Stricker, J G Verbalis.   

Abstract

Sodium chloride ingestion is stimulated during conditions of sodium deficiency to maintain body fluid and electrolyte balance. Recent studies have indicated that salt appetite in rats is often inversely related to peripheral and central secretion of the hormone oxytocin (OT). We studied the potential role of central OT on salt and water ingestion by treating rats intracerebroventricularly with OT conjugated to the A chain of the plant cytotoxin ricin (rAOT) to produce a chronic selective inactivation of brain cells containing OT-receptive elements. The rats treated with rAOT and control rats treated with the ricin A chain alone were given 5-hr two-bottle (water and 0.5 M NaCl) drinking tests 30 min after they were made hyperosmolar by injections of hypertonic (2M) mannitol solution, which elevated plasma osmolality but reduced plasma Na+ concentration. In the control rats only water intake was stimulated in response to the induced hyperosmolality, but in the rAOT-treated rats hypertonic mannitol caused a robust salt appetite as well as thirst. Analogous results were obtained in rats treated with two different OT-receptor antagonists prior to induction of hyperosmolality with mannitol. In contrast to these results, when hyperosmolality was induced by administration of equivalently hypertonic (1M) NaCl, which elevated both plasma osmolality and plasma Na+ concentration, only water intake but not salt intake was stimulated in both control and OT-receptor antagonist-treated rats. When salt appetite was stimulated by the physiological stimulus of polyethylene glycol-induced hypovolemia, hypertonic mannitol similarly inhibited salt ingestion in control animals but not in rAOT-treated rats, whereas hypertonic NaCl inhibited subsequent salt ingestion in both groups. These results suggest that salt appetite is regulated by both Na(+)- and osmolality-sensing mechanisms in rats. In addition, they indicate that central OT likely mediates a significant component of osmolality-related inhibition of salt appetite but does not appear to be essential for Na(+)-related inhibition of this important homeostatic behavior.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8234302      PMCID: PMC47778          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.90.21.10380

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  20 in total

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Authors:  E M Stricker; J G Verbalis
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Review 4.  Redesigning nature's poisons to create anti-tumor reagents.

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Review 5.  Central oxytocin inhibition of food and salt ingestion: a mechanism for intake regulation of solute homeostasis.

Authors:  J G Verbalis; R E Blackburn; B R Olson; E M Stricker
Journal:  Regul Pept       Date:  1993-04-29

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Journal:  Am J Physiol       Date:  1986-02

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Authors:  E M Stricker
Journal:  J Comp Physiol Psychol       Date:  1981-02
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  17 in total

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