|
|
||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, KY 40536-0298, USA
2 Department of Physiology, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, TX 78229, USA
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
(Received 8 July 2005;
accepted after revision 3 August 2005;
first published online 4 August 2005)
Corresponding author S. D. Stocker: Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, KY 40526-0298, USA. Email: sdstoc3{at}email.uky.edu
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Lesions of the anteroventral region of the third cerebral ventricle which include the MnPO produce profound alterations in body fluid homeostasis and cardiovascular regulation. Most notably, these lesions attenuate experimentally induced thirst, vasopressin secretion and arterial hypertension in several experimental models associated with elevated sympathetic outflow (Johnson & Loewy, 1990). Similarly, more discrete lesions of the MnPO disrupt drinking behaviour stimulated by hyperosmolality, Ang II and hypovolemia (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Gardiner & Stricker, 1985; Cunningham et al. 1991; Cunningham et al. 1992), and attenuate neurohypophysial secretion of vasopressin stimulated by hyperosmolality and Ang II (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Gardiner et al. 1985). Moreover, lesion or inactivation of the MnPO attenuates centrally mediated pressor responses stimulated by Ang II or hyperosmolality (O'Neill & Brody, 1987; Yasuda et al. 2000). Taken together, these observations strongly suggest the MnPO may serve as a forebrain integration site for both humoral and visceral afferent information related to body fluid homeostasis and autonomic function.
Despite the potential integrative role of the MnPO, relatively few in vivo studies have investigated whether hyperosmolality, circulating Ang II and baroreceptor input alter the firing rates of MnPO neurones with axonal projections to the PVN (MnPO-PVN). This specific population of MnPO neurones probably plays a significant role in the responses to these challenges as the PVN is well-positioned to coordinate neuroendocrine, autonomic and behavioural responses to stress since it contains magnocellular and parvocellular neuroendocrine and autonomic neurones. In this regard, the discharge of MnPO-PVN neurones has been reported to increase in response to hyperosmolality (Tanaka et al. 1995), whereas a separate study demonstrated that the firing rates of MnPO-PVN neurones decreased during baroreceptor activation produced by increases in arterial blood pressure (ABP) (Tanaka et al. 1993). However, there is surprisingly no data demonstrating that increases in circulating Ang II levels alter the discharge of MnPO-PVN neurones. More importantly, it is not known whether osmotic, circulating Ang II and baroreceptor inputs target distinct or identical populations of MnPO-PVN neurones. The present study used extracellular single-unit recordings in vivo to determine whether individual MnPO-PVN neurones are responsive to osmotic, circulating Ang II and/or baroreceptor inputs. Since the MnPO has been implicated in centrally mediated pressor responses and autonomic function (O'Neill & Brody, 1987; Yasuda et al. 2000), we also determined whether the discharge of these MnPO-PVN neurones was temporally correlated with sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) and the cardiac cycle.
| Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (Charles River Laboratories) weighing 300375 g were housed in a temperature-controlled room (2223°C) with a 14 : 10 h lightdark cycle (lights on at 7 AM). Tap water and laboratory chow (Harlan Teklad LM-485, 0.3% NaCl) were available ad libitum except where noted. A total of 40 rats were used for the electrophysiology investigation of MnPO neurones and an additional 3 rats were used for retrograde tract tracing experiments. All experimental and surgical procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio and were performed in strict accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
Experimental procedures
Rats were anaesthetized either with a mixture of
-chloralose (75 mg kg1) and urethane (750 mg kg1) given intraperitoneally or initially with 3% isoflurane (in 100% O2) followed by an identical mixture of
-chloralose and urethane intravenously. After tracheal cannulation, rats were neuromuscularly blocked with a continuous infusion of gallamine triethiode dissolved in 5% dextrose (25 mg kg1 h1, 80 µl h1, I.V.) through a femoral catheter and artificially ventilated with oxygen-enriched room air. End tidal PCO2 was maintained between 4.5 and 5.5% by adjusting ventilation rate (70100 breaths min1) and/or tidal volume (23 ml). Additional catheters were placed into the left brachial artery and right jugular vein for recording ABP and administration of drugs, respectively. Body temperature was maintained at 37 ± 1°C with a water-circulating pad. Mean ABP (MAP) was determined by adding one-third of the pulse pressure to diastolic blood pressure. Heart rate was derived from the peak of the QRS complex obtained from EKG leads placed in the forepaws. An adequate depth of anaesthesia was assessed by absence of a withdrawal reflex (before neuromuscular blockade) or a pressor response to foot pinch. Supplemental doses of anaesthetic (10% of initial dose, I.V.) were given as necessary.
Extracellular single-unit recordings
Rats were placed in a stereotaxic head frame and the skull was levelled between bregma and lambda. A craniotomy was performed to remove bone overlying the cortex to allow electrodes to be lowered into the MnPO and PVN. Extracellular recordings of MnPO neurones were made with an intracellular amplifier in bridge mode (AxoClamp 2B, Axon Instruments) and glass microelectrodes filled with 2% Chicago Sky Blue or 5% Neurobiotin (see Juxtacellular labelling below) dissolved in isotonic saline and a tip resistance of 1030 M
measured in vivo. The MnPO was probed for single-unit activity with the electrode down-angled 68 deg to gain access to the midline without moving the midsagital sinus. The glass electrode was moved vertically in 2 µm steps with a piezoelectric micropositioning device while electrically stimulating the PVN (see Antidromic stimulation of the PVN below) to identify both spontaneously active and quiescent units.
Antidromic stimulation of the PVN
To identify MnPO neurones with axonal projections to the PVN, antidromic stimulation was performed using a concentric bipolar stimulating electrode (outer tip diameter, 250 µm; Frederick Haer & Co, Bowdoinham, ME, USA) placed into the ipsilateral PVN (1.72.0 mm caudal to bregma, 0.50.7 mm lateral to midline, 7.67.8 mm ventral to brain surface). In some experiments, bipolar stimulating electrodes were placed in the PVN bilaterally. The placement of PVN stimulating electrodes was verified histologically after experiments (see Histology). Antidromic activation of MnPO neurones was performed by applying square-wave current pulses (0.5 ms) at a low frequency (0.51.0 Hz) with varying amplitude (initially 1.0 mA) to determine threshold intensity. When a neurone displayed a constant onset latency during antidromic stimulation, additional tests were performed to confirm its antidromic nature as described previously (Lipski, 1981). Units were considered to be antidromically activated from the PVN according to the following criteria: (1) displayed a constant latency of the antidromic spike, (2) ability to follow high frequency stimulation (> 250300 Hz), and (3) collision or cancellation of the stimulus-evoked spike by a spontaneous action potential. For extremely short latency responses (< 5 ms), high frequency stimulation could not always be demonstrated due to interference from the stimulus artifact. Collision of stimulus-evoked spikes by a spontaneous action potential was not performed in a subset of neurones due to a lack of spontaneous activity. All neurones in the present study satisfied at least two criteria.
Physiological stimulation
To selectively stimulate forebrain neurones, solutions of NaCl, mannitol or Ang II were delivered through a catheter advanced into the internal carotid artery (ICA) approximately 1.52.0 mm rostral to the carotid bifurcation via the occipital artery. This allows blood flow to be maintained through the carotid arteries while delivering solutions directly to the forebrain. Neuronal responses to hyperosmotic NaCl (0.75 or 1.5 osmol l1), Ang II (150 ng) and isotonic saline (0.3 osmol l1) delivered to the ICA were examined. In a subset of neurones, hypertonic mannitol (1.5 osmol l1) was also tested. All solutions were dissolved in isotonic saline and delivered over 10 s in a volume of 100 µl. Barosensitivity was determined by changes in neuronal discharge to phenylephrine (PE; 420 µg kg1, I.V.) or sodium nitroprusside (SNP; 420 µg kg1, I.V.) to increase or decrease arterial blood pressure, respectively. In some experiments, an inflatable cuff was placed around the descending aorta proximal to the renal vessels to increase ABP non-pharmacologically in the carotid sinus and aortic arch as previously described (Stocker et al. 2004).
Unit discharge correlation with sympathetic nerve activity and the cardiac cycle
In some animals, a renal sympathetic nerve was isolated and placed onto a stainless steel wire electrode (A-M system, 0.125 mm O.D.) through a retroperitoneal incision as described previously (Stocker et al. 2005). Nerve signals were obtained using a high-impedance probe connected to an AC amplifier equipped with half-amplitude filters (band pass, 303000 Hz) and a 60 Hz notch filter. Then, the signal was amplified (10 00020 000), full-wave rectified and integrated (10 ms time constant) using a moving averager (MA-821RSP, Cwe Inc., Ardmore, PA, USA), and digitized at a frequency of 1000 Hz using a 1401plus analog-to-digital converter and Spike 2 software (Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK). Spike-triggered averages were constructed between spontaneous neuronal discharge (> 500 events) and postganglionic renal SNA to determine whether unit discharge exhibited a temporal relationship with renal SNA. These were compared to renal SNA averages constructed from the same number of square-wave pulses delivered randomly at an average frequency approximately equal to the discharge of the recorded neurone. To determine whether spontaneous discharge had a cardiac-cycle-related rhythm, time histograms of unit discharge were constructed and triggered from the R wave of the EKG signal.
Juxtacellular labelling
In a subset of animals (n = 21), we attempted to juxtacellularly label the recorded neurone with biotinamide (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA) or neurobiotin (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA, USA) as described previously (Pinault, 1996). Once neuronal responses were examined in response to the above stimuli, current pulses (200 ms duration, 50% duty cycle) of increasing amplitude (0.56 nA) were delivered through the recording electrode containing 5% biotinamide or neurobiotin dissolved in isotonic saline. Once the cell discharge became entrained to the current pulses, the amplitude was adjusted to maintain entrainment without damaging the neurone. These current pulses iontophorectically eject biotinamide to fill the soma and proximal dendrites of the recorded cell. After 20120 s of clear entrainment, the current pulses were terminated and the cell was allowed to recover for at least 1 h. Only one entrainment was attempted per experiment.
Histology
At the end of experiments, the recording site was marked by applying DC current through the recording electrode (5 µA, 5 min) if a cell was not entrained. This resulted in a deposit of Chicago Sky Blue or biotinamide in the extracellular space. Stimulating electrodes targeted at the PVN were marked by applying DC current (50 µA, 15 s). Then, the animals were perfused transcardially with 4% paraformaldehyde (4°C, 200 ml) dissolved in 0.1 M PBS. Brains were removed and post-fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde overnight and immersed in 20% sucrose dissolved in 0.1 M PBS for 23 days. Brains were sectioned at 50 µm using a sliding microtome. Sections with antidromic stimulation sites were mounted on glass slides, counterstained with cresyl violet, and analysed under a light microscope. All MnPO-PVN neurones in the present study had antidromic stimulation sites located in the middle to caudal third of the PVN and consistently encroached on the posterior magnocellular, dorsal and ventrolateral parvocellular, and/or lateral parvocellular subnuclei. Sections containing juxtacellularly labelled cells (or marked recording sites) were stored in vials containing cryoprotectant (30% sucrose, 30% ethylene glycol, 1% polyvinyl-pyrrolidone in 0.l M PBS) at 25°C. Labelled cells were visualized by standard immunocytochemical methods. After several rinses in 0.1 M PBS, sections were incubated in a solution containing 0.2% Triton X-100 in 0.1 M PBS plus an avidinperoxidase conjugate (ABC Vectastain Kit, Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA, USA) overnight at 4°C. Sections were then reacted for 4 min in Tris buffer (pH 7.3) containing 0.05% 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (Sigma-Aldrich) and 0.6% hydrogen peroxide. The reaction was terminated with several rinses in 0.1 M PBS. In some experiments, labelled cells were visualized by incubating sections overnight at 4°C with streptavidinAlexa Fluor 488 (1 : 250, Molecular Probes). All sections were mounted on glass slides, dehydrated in graded alcohols, cleared in xylene, and coverslipped with Cytoseal 60 (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA, USA). Recording sites marked with biotinamide were visualized by identical methods.
Retrograde tracing from the PVN
Since there are limited data demonstrating whether MnPO neurones project to the PVN bilaterally, we performed a set of retrograde tracing experiments from both the left and right PVN. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (300350 g, n = 3) were anaesthetized with 3% isoflurane (in 100% O2) and placed into a stereotaxic head frame with the skull level between bregma and lambda. After the overlying bone and dura were removed, 4% Fluorogold (10 nl; Fluorochrome, Denver, CO, USA) was microinjected into the PVN as described previously (Stocker et al. 2005) using the following coordinates: 1.8 mm caudal to bregma, 0.50.7 mm lateral to midline, and 7.65 mm ventral to the dorsal surface of the skull. Rhodamine-labelled fluorescent microspheres (50 nl; LumaFluor, Naples, FL, USA) were microinjected into the contralateral PVN using similar coordinates except the pipette was moved to the opposite side of the brain 0.50.7 mm lateral from the midline sinus. All microinjections were performed with glass micropipettes (O.D., 30 µm) connected to a pneumatic picopump (WPI, Sarasota, FL, USA), and the tracers were injected over 30 s. Once the pipette had been left in place for 10 min and removed, the hole in the skull was filled with bone wax, the overlying musculature and skin sutured, and each rat was treated with ampicillin (100 mg kg1, I.M.) and returned to its home cage.
Approximately 68 days later, rats were deeply anaesthetized with urethane (1.5 mg kg1, I.P.) and perfused transcardially with heparinized isotonic saline (10 units ml1, 100 ml) followed by 4% paraformaldehyde (4°C, 300 ml) in 0.1 M PBS. Brains were removed, post-fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde, and immersed in 20% sucrose for 2 days. Brains were then sectioned at 30 µm using a sliding microtome, collected into three serially adjacent sets, and stored in vials containing cryoprotectant at 25°C as described above. One set of tissue was rinsed in 0.1 M PBS, mounted on glass slides, and coverslipped using Cytoseal 60 mounting medium (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA, USA).
Statistical analysis
Basal discharge of MnPO neurones was determined from a representative 3 min rate-meter record (1 s bins) when ABP was stable. Differences in basal firing rate, antidromic latency, or antidromic threshold were analysed using independent t tests (Systat 10.2, Systat Software, Inc., Richmond, CA, USA). Changes in unit discharge in response to hyperosmotic, Ang II and baroreceptor stimulation were analysed by comparing the average 30-s baseline discharge to the average discharge of a 5-s segment after the onset of the stimulus. Values were log-transformed and then statistically analysed using a paired t test. To determine whether unit activity was correlated with SNA, spike-triggered averages of renal SNA were compared with averages triggered by the same number of pulses delivered at randomized intervals but with a similar average frequency of the recorded cell discharge. When the amplitude was at least 3-fold greater than the corresponding random pulse-triggered average, unit discharge was considered to possess a significant correlation with renal SNA. To determine whether spontaneous discharge displayed a cardiac cycle-related rhythm, post-EKG R-wave time histograms of unit discharge were constructed. Data for spike-triggered averages and cardiac cycle-related rhythms were taken from a rate-meter record when no stimulus was given. For all comparisons, a P value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
For retrograde-labelling experiments, digital images were collected from three rostralcaudal levels of the MnPO (see Fig. 6) using an Olympus IX50 microscope connected to a Spot camera (Spot RT Slider, Diagnostic Instruments, Inc, Sterling Heights, MI, USA) using Spot imaging software (version 3.24). Level 1 was the most rostral and consisted of an incomplete anterior commissure and a small 3rd ventricle. Level 2 displayed a complete anterior commissure that separated the dorsal and ventral MnPO. Level 3 also had a complete anterior commissure but with a compact ventral MnPO and a very prominent 3rd ventricle. Sampling from these three levels represented a section approximately every 100 µm through the rostralcaudal extent of the MnPO. For purposes of visualization, FG and rhodamine-labelled neurones were pseudocoloured green and red, respectively, and images were digitally overlaid. Accordingly, double-labelled neurones appear yellow in the merged images. The number of retrogradely labelled neurones was quantified and compared by an independent t test. When data were expressed as a per cent, groups were compared by a Mann-Whitney U test.
|
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Recordings were made from 65 MnPO neurones with a basal discharge of 2.8 ± 0.5 Hz (range: 0.016.7 Hz). Of these units, 50 MnPO neurones were antidromically activated from the PVN with an average onset latency of 11.3 ± 0.7 ms (range: 425 ms) and antidromic threshold of 224 ± 20 µA (range: 30650 µA, 0.5 ms pulse duration). The average conduction velocity was 0.18 ± 0.01 m s1 (range: 0.060.45 m s1) thereby suggesting the axons of these neurones were unmyelinated. Interestingly, only 9.5% (2 of 21) of MnPO-PVN units were antidromically activated from both sides of the PVN, thereby indicating that the majority of MnPO-PVN cells have unilateral projections to the PVN (see Retrograde labelling from the PVN). The basal discharge of MnPO-PVN neurones averaged 2.0 ± 0.5 Hz (range: 0.016.7 Hz); 62% (31 of 50) of these cells were spontaneously active with an average discharge of 3.3 ± 0.8 Hz (range: 0.0116.7 Hz), whereas 38% (19 of 50) were quiescent (basal discharge < 0.01 Hz). The antidromic onset latencies, conduction velocities and antidromic thresholds did not differ between spontaneously active and quiescent MnPO-PVN neurones. However, the majority of quiescent units (63%, 12 of 19) were unresponsive to hyperosmotic, Ang II or baroreceptor stimulation, whereas only 10% (3 of 31) of spontaneously active MnPO-PVN neurones were unresponsive to the same stimuli.
MnPO-PVN neuronal responses to hyperosmotic, Ang II and baroreceptor stimulation
For purposes of presentation, MnPO-PVN neurones were divided into four groups based upon each unit's responses to hyperosmotic and/or Ang II stimulation: (1) type I neurones (n = 13) responded to osmotic but not Ang II stimulation; (2) type II neurones (n = 7) responded to Ang II but not osmotic stimulation; (3) type III neurones (n = 16) responded to both osmotic and Ang II stimulation; and (4) type IV neurones (n = 14) did not respond to osmotic or Ang II stimulation. Changes in baroreceptor input produced by increases or decreases in ABP altered cell discharge in a subset of each neuronal group. Table 1 provides a summary of these discharge characteristics for each neuronal type.
|
|
|
|
|
Only 12% (2/16) of type III neurones displayed a decrease in firing rate in response to both hypertonic NaCl and Ang II. Again, both treatments significantly increased mean ABP by 11 ± 4 mmHg (P < 0.05; baseline mean ABP: 115 ± 6 mmHg) and 46 ± 4 mmHg (P < 0.01; baseline mean ABP: 115 ± 8 mmHg), respectively. The magnitude of the change in mean ABP was not different from those values when neuronal discharge increased. Figure 5 provides an example of a type III neurone that displayed a significant decrease in cell discharge in response to ICA injection of hypertonic saline or mannitol and ICA injection of Ang II.
|
Location and juxtacellular labelling of MnPO-PVN neurones
Figure 6 is a schematic of three rostralcaudal levels of the MnPO illustrating the location of type I, II and III MnPO-PVN neurones. Responsive units were located throughout the rostralcaudal and dorsalventral extent of the MnPO. In a subset of MnPO-PVN neurones, we attempted to fill these units with biotinamide by juxtacellular labelling as described elsewhere (Pinault, 1996). Figure 7A illustrates the typical steps in the juxtacellular-labelling procedure. Initially, the cell discharge is not entrained to simulated current pulses (200 ms, 50% duty cycle). After increasing the stimulus intensity of current pulses delivered through the recording electrode, the unit activity becomes strongly entrained to the current pulses. Once the current pulses are terminated, the cell recovers and its activity is no longer entrained to the simulated current pulses. Successful labelling was obtained in 86% (18/21) of MnPO-PVN neurones, and these cells were located in either the ventral (n = 11, Fig. 7B) or dorsal (n = 7, Fig. 7C) MnPO. These neurones typically had a small soma (< 25 µm) with one or two primary dendrites that extended into the middle of the MnPO. Presumptive axons of MnPO-PVN neurones coursed caudally to the PVN along the wall of the 3rd ventricle.
|
Since antidromic activation of MnPO units from the PVN suggested that less than 10% of MnPO-PVN neurones have a bilateral projection to the PVN, we sought to confirm this observation by microinjecting two different retrograde tracers into opposite sides of the PVN and quantifying the number of retrogradely labelled MnPO neurones. Microinjection of fluorogold and rhodamine-labelled microspheres into the PVN produced a similar number of retrogradely labelled neurones in the MnPO (fluorogold: 327 ± 34 neurones versus rhodamine: 279 ± 37 neurones; Fig. 8); however, very few neurones contained both tracers (11 ± 4 neurones; Fig. 8). When expressed as a percentage, only 3.3 ± 1.0% of fluorogold-positive neurones contained rhodamine microspheres, whereas 3.8 ± 1.0% of rhodamine-positive neurones contained fluorogold. Interestingly, the distribution of labelled neurones in the MnPO was not limited to the ipsilateral side of the injection; rather, cells were spread throughout the nucleus. Similar to the MnPO, less than 10% of neurones in the subfornical organ and the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis were positive for both fluorogold and rhodamine-labelled microspheres (data not shown).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Elevated plasma Ang II levels stimulate the ingestion of water (Fitzsimons, 1998), secretion of vasopressin and oxytocin (Iovino & Steardo, 1984; Stocker et al. 2004), and Fos immunoreactivity in forebrain lamina terminalis structures including the MnPO (Oldfield et al. 1994; Potts et al. 1999). Lesions of the MnPO attenuate the increase in water intake and vasopressin secretion during increases in plasma Ang II levels (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Cunningham et al. 1991, 1992), but whether circulating Ang II increases the discharge of MnPO neurones was not known previously. In the present study, we clearly demonstrate that ICA injection of Ang II significantly increased the discharge of MnPO-PVN neurones (type II and III). Interestingly, a subset of these type II and III neurones were barosensitive, and the Ang II-evoked pressor response appeared to mask the Ang II-evoked increase in cell discharge. That is, attenuation of the increase in ABP during ICA Ang II application resulted in a significantly greater increase in MnPO-PVN neuronal discharge. In an analogous manner, Potts and colleagues (Potts et al. 1999) have reported that I.V. infusion of Ang II produces a significantly greater level of Fos immunoreactivity in forebrain structures including the MnPO in barodenervated versus barointact rabbits. The functional significance for this effect may be that the responsiveness of MnPO neurones to neurohumoral stimuli depends on the prevailing levels of ABP and/or blood volume. Consistent with this notion, several investigators have postulated that the pressor action of exogenously administered Ang II may mask the ability of Ang II to stimulate vasopressin secretion and/or thirst (Mitchell et al. 1982; Robinson & Evered, 1987; Schreihofer et al. 2000; Stocker et al. 2001, 2002, 2004). Although barodenervation or attenuation of the peripheral Ang II-evoked pressor response does not further enhance plasma levels of vasopressin and oxytocin (Schreihofer et al. 2000; Stocker et al. 2004), barodenervation or prevention of the Ang II-pressor response does enhance thirst (Robinson & Evered, 1987; Schreihofer et al. 2000; Stocker et al. 2001, 2002) and acutely increases sympathetic outflow (Xu & Sved, 2002) during an I.V. infusion of Ang II. Whether either of these responses depends on the integration of circulating Ang II levels and baroreceptor inputs by MnPO-PVN neurones awaits further investigation.
Hyperosmolality also stimulates the ingestion of water, secretion of vasopressin and oxytocin, and changes in sympathetic outflow (Bourque et al. 1994; Weiss et al. 1996; Chen & Toney, 2001). To the extent that it has been investigated, lesion or inactivation of the MnPO attenuates each of the aforementioned responses (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Gardiner & Stricker, 1985; Gardiner et al. 1985; Cunningham et al. 1991, 1992; Yasuda et al. 2000). Consistent with these findings, previous studies have reported that hyperosmolality increases the discharge of MnPO neurones (McAllen et al. 1990; Tanaka et al. 1995; Aradachi et al. 1996). Our findings confirm and extend these observations as ICA injection of hypertonic NaCl and mannitol concentration-dependently increased the discharge of MnPO-PVN neurones (type I and III). Moreover, some of these type I and III neurones were barosensitive. The possible convergence of osmotic and baroreceptor inputs onto MnPO-PVN neurones probably has functional significance as an increase in ABP has been reported to inhibit thirst stimulated by hyperosmolality (Stocker et al. 2001, 2002). Moreover, barodenervation results in a greater sympthoexcitatory response to ICA injection or I.V. infusion of hypertonic NaCl (Weiss et al. 1996; Chen & Toney, 2001). Future studies are needed to determine whether these responses (e.g. thirst, sympathetic outflow) depend upon synaptic integration within MnPO and/or at downstream targets. The neural pathways and cellular mechanisms by which baroreceptor information is transmitted to MnPO neurones remains largely unexplored; however, the MnPO has afferent connections with catecholaminergic and non-catecholaminergic neurones in the nucleus tractus solitarius and ventrolateral medulla (Saper et al. 1983) two areas known to contain neurones responsive to changes in ABP.
As noted above, lesion or inactivation of the MnPO disrupts drinking behaviour, neurohypophyseal secretion of vasopressin, and centrally mediated pressor responses stimulated by hyperosmolaity and Ang II (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Gardiner & Stricker, 1985; O'Neill & Brody, 1987; Cunningham et al. 1991, 1992; Yasuda et al. 2000). Although a myriad of studies have reported that each stimulus increases Fos immunoreactivity in the MnPO (Oldfield et al. 1994; Potts et al. 1999), such studies are limited as they cannot reveal whether a single neurone responds to a number of different stimuli. In the present study, we demonstrate that ICA injection of both hypertonic NaCl and Ang II increased cell discharge in a number of MnPO-PVN neurones (type III). Moreover, a subset of these neurones was barosensitive. These observations strongly suggest the MnPO may serve as a forebrain integration site for both humoral and visceral afferent information related to body fluid homeostasis and autonomic function.
Since a subset of osmotic- and/or Ang II-responsive MnPO-PVN neurones was barosensitive, this raises the possibility that the increase in ABP associated with osmotic and/or Ang II stimulation may influence the change in cell discharge. Indeed, we directly explored this possibility and observed such an effect in a subset of Ang II-responsive MnPO-PVN neurones (type II and III). With regard to osmotically responsive MnPO-PVN neurones, the initial increase in cell discharge consistently preceded the increase in ABP during ICA injection of hypertonic NaCl. Thus, at least a portion of the osmotically evoked change in cell discharge is not likely to be influenced by ABP. Since we did not consistently clamp ABP at baseline levels during osmotic or Ang II stimulation, the absolute number of osmotic- and Ang II-responsive neurones may be underestimated, and the relative number of type I, II and III MnPO-PVN neurones may not reflect the true response characteristics. However, the present findings do, in fact, provide clear evidence that individual MnPO-PVN neurones are responsive to multiple neurohumoral stimuli including osmotic, circulating Ang II and baroreceptor input.
Several investigators have reported retrograde labelling of MnPO neurones following injection of transneuronal pseudorabies virus into sympathetically innervated organs such as the kidney or sympathetic ganglia (Westerhaus & Loewy, 1999; Sly et al. 2001; Cano et al. 2004). In the present study, we found populations of type I, II and III MnPO-PVN neurones that displayed a basal discharge that significantly correlated with renal SNA. Interestingly, every MnPO-PVN neurone with sympathetic-related discharge responded to osmotic and/or Ang II stimulation. However, such a correlation does not prove these MnPO-PVN neurones are functionally linked to the control of SNA. Whether these neurones represent a distinct population of cells that participate in appropriate cardiovascular and autonomic responses during elevations in plasma osmolality and circulating Ang II levels remains to be fully explored.
Anatomical studies have demonstrated that MnPO neurones densely innervate magnocellular and parvocellular neurones of the PVN (Sawchenko & Swanson, 1983; Zardetto-Smith et al. 1993). Our present findings extend those observations as electrophysiological experiments demonstrate that the majority of MnPO-PVN neurones were antidromically activated unilaterally from the PVN. In agreement, our anatomical findings with retrograde tracers microinjected into the left and right PVN suggest less than 10% of MnPO-PVN neurones project to the PVN bilaterally. Similar observations have been made with MnPO neuronal projections to the supraoptic nuclei (Renaud et al. 1993). Interestingly, Weiss & Hatton (1990) reported that only a few MnPO neurones project to both the PVN and supraoptic nucleus. This raises the possibility that the MnPO contains different populations of neurones those controlling neurohypophysial secretion versus autonomic outflow versus ingestive behaviour. While we did not investigate the neurochemical phenotype of these MnPO-PVN neurones, previous immunocytochemical and in situ hybridization studies have reported MnPO neurones contain a number of neurotransmitters/neurotransmitter markers including neurotensin, met-enkephalin, substance P, GABA (GAD65 and GAD67 mRNA), and glutamate (vesicular glutamate transporter-2 mRNA) (Moga & Saper, 1994; Westerhaus et al. 1999; Grob et al. 2003; Lin et al. 2003). Given the neurochemical complexity of MnPO neurones, it would be interesting to speculate that functional inputs target neurochemically distinct populations of MnPO neurones or those MnPO-PVN neurones with a sympathetic-related discharge are neurochemically distinct.
Synaptic integration within the MnPO
The forebrain lamina terminalis contains several interconnected structures along the rostral wall of the third ventricle that include the MnPO and two circumventricular organs: the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis and the subfornical organ. In general, the latter two structures sense or detect changes in plasma osmolality and circulating Ang II levels, respectively (Johnson & Loewy, 1990; Johnson et al. 1996); however, it is noteworthy that these structures probably contain some neurones responsive to either stimulus (Gutman et al. 1988; Oldfield et al. 1994). While lesions of the subfornical organ and organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis significantly attenuate the ingestion of water and secretion of vasopressin to circulating Ang II levels and hyperosmolality, respectively (Johnson & Loewy, 1990; Johnson et al. 1996), lesions of the MnPO attenuate these responses to both stimuli (Mangiapane et al. 1983; Gardiner & Stricker, 1985; Gardiner et al. 1985; Cunningham et al. 1991, 1992). These observations together with the dense innveration of the MnPO by neurones in these two circumventricular structures raises the possibility that the MnPO serves as the integration site for these neurohumoral signals. The present electrophysiological data strongly support this notion as hyperosmotic and circulating Ang II inputs targeted overlapping populations of MnPO-PVN neurones. However, the present data do not directly address whether these neurohumoral inputs independently converge onto MnPO neurones or whether MnPO-PVN neurones receive an integrated signal.
Despite the abundance of evidence provided by functional studies to support an integrative role for the MnPO, relatively little is known regarding the synaptic mechanisms by which these neurohumoral stimuli mediate changes in neuronal excitability. Anatomical studies suggest a small proportion of subfornical organ neurones that project to the MnPO are immunoreactive for Ang II (Lind et al. 1984). A functional role for Ang II as a neurotransmitter in the subfornical organMnPO pathway is supported by in vivo electrophysiological evidence as iontophoretic blockade of Ang II receptors attenuated the increase in MnPO neuronal discharge during electrical stimulation of subfornical organ (Tanaka et al. 1986, 1987). This is consistent with in vitro patch-clamp studies demonstrating that Ang II depolarizes MnPO neurones by activation of Ang II type 1A receptors (Bai & Renaud, 1998). On the other hand, recent in vitro evidence suggests that both GABAA and glutamatergic ionotropic receptors mediate fast neurotransmission from the subfornical organ to the MnPO (Kolaj et al. 2004). In contrast, much less is known regarding the neurochemical inputs originating from the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis; however, in situ hybridization studies suggest that this region contains the vesicular glutamate transporter-2 (Lin et al. 2003) and activation of glutamatergic receptors has been postulated to mediate inputs from organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis onto supraoptic magnocelluar neurones (Bourque & Richard, 2001). Insight into the synaptic and cellular mechanisms by which neurohumoral inputs lead to changes in neuronal excitability may identify distinct populations of MnPO neurones that are anatomically and/or functionally linked to neuroendocrine, behavioural and autonomic responses relevant to body fluid homeostasis and cardiovascular regulation.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Bai
D
&
Renaud
LP (1998). ANG II AT1 receptors induce depolarization and inward current in rat median preoptic neurons in vitro. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
275, R632R639.
Bourque CW, Oliet SH & Richard D (1994). Osmoreceptors, osmoreception, and osmoregulation. Front Neuroendocrinol 15, 231274.[CrossRef][Medline]
Bourque CW & Richard D (2001). Axonal projections from the organum vasculosum lamina terminalis to the supraoptic nucleus: functional analysis and presynaptic modulation. Clin Exp Pharm Physiol 28, 570574.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cano G, Card JP & Sved AF (2004). Dual viral transneuronal tracing of central autonomic circuits involved in the innervation of the two kidneys in rat. J Comp Neurol 471, 462481.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chen
QH
&
Toney
GM (2001). AT(1)-receptor blockade in the hypothalamic PVN reduces central hyperosmolality-induced renal sympathoexcitation. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
281, R1844R1853.
Cunningham JT, Beltz T, Johnson RF & Johnson AK (1992). The effects of ibotenate lesions of the median preoptic nucleus on experimentally-induced and circadian drinking behavior in rats. Brain Res 580, 325330.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cunningham JT, Sullivan MJ, Edwards GL, Farinpour R, Beltz TG & Johnson AK (1991). Dissociation of experimentally induced drinking behavior by ibotenate injection into the median preoptic nucleus. Brain Res 554, 153158.[CrossRef][Medline]
Fitzsimons
JT (1998). Angiotensin, thirst, and sodium appetite. Physiol Rev
78, 583686.
Gardiner
TW
&
Stricker
EM (1985). Impaired drinking responses of rats with lesions of nucleus medianus: circadian dependence. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
248, R224R230.
Gardiner
TW, Verbalis
JG
&
Stricker
EM (1985). Impaired secretion of vasopressin and oxytocin in rats after lesions of nucleus medianus. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
249, R681R688.
Grob M, Trottier JF, Drolet G & Mouginot D (2003). Characterization of the neurochemical content of neuronal populations of the lamina terminalis activated by acute hydromineral challenge. Neurosci 122, 247257.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gutman
MB, Ciriello
J
&
Mogenson
GJ (1988). Effects of plasma angiotensin II and hypernatremia on subfornical organ neurons. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
254, R746R754.
Iovino M & Steardo L (1984). Vasopressin release to central and peripheral angiotensin II in rats with lesions of the subfornical organ. Brain Res 322, 365368.[CrossRef][Medline]
Johnson AK, Cunningham JT & Thunhorst RL (1996). Integrative role of the lamina terminalis in the regulation of cardiovascular and body fluid homeostasis. Clin Exp Pharm Physiol 23, 183191.[Medline]
Johnson AK & Loewy AD (1990). Circumventricular organs and their role in visceral functions. In Central Regulation of Autonomic Function, ed. Loewy AD & Spyer KM, pp. 247267. Oxford University Press, New York.
Kolaj
M, Bai
D
&
Renaud
LP (2004). GABAB receptor modulation of rapid inhibitory and excitatory neurotransmission from subfornical organ and other afferents to median preoptic nucleus neurons. J Neurophysiol
92, 111122.
Lin
W, McKinney
K, Liu
L, Lakhlani
S
&
Jennes
L (2003). Distribution of vesicular glutamate transporter-2 messenger ribonucleic acid and protein in the septum-hypothalamus of the rat. Endocrinology
144, 662670.
Lind RW, Swanson LW & Ganten D (1984). Angiotensin II immunoreactivity in the neural afferents and efferents of the subfornical organ of the rat. Brain Res 321, 209215.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lipski J (1981). Antidromic activation of neurones as an analytic tool in the study of the central nervous system. J Neurosci Meth 4, 132.[CrossRef][Medline]
McAllen
RM, Pennington
GL
&
McKinley
MJ (1990). Osmoresponsive units in sheep median preoptic nucleus. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
259, R593R600.
Mangiapane ML, Thrasher TN, Keil LC, Simpson JB & Ganong WF (1983). Deficits in drinking and vasopressin secretion after lesions of the nucleus medianus. Neuroendocrinology 37, 7377.[CrossRef][Medline]
Mitchell LD, Barron K, Brody MJ & Johnson AK (1982). Two possible actions for circulating angiotensin II in the control of vasopressin release. Peptides 3, 503507.[CrossRef][Medline]
Moga MM & Saper CB (1994). Neuropeptide-immunoreactive neurons projecting to the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus in the rat. J Comp Neurol 346, 137150.[CrossRef][Medline]
Oldfield BJ, Badoer E, Hards DK & McKinley MJ (1994). Fos production in retrogradely labelled neurons of the lamina terminalis following intravenous infusion of either hypertonic saline or angiotensin II. Neurosci 60, 255262.[CrossRef][Medline]
Oldfield BJ, Miselis RR & McKinley MJ (1991). Median preoptic nucleus projections to vasopressin-containing neurones of the supraoptic nucleus in sheep. A light and electron microscopic study. Brain Res 542, 193200.[CrossRef][Medline]
O'Neill
TP
&
Brody
MJ (1987). Role for the median preoptic nucleus in centrally evoked pressor responses. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
252, Part 2, R1165R1172.
Paxinos G & Watson C (1998). The Rat Brain in Stereotaxic Coordinates, CD-Rom. Academic Press, San Diego.
Pinault D (1996). A novel single-cell staining procedure performed in vivo under electrophysiological control: morpho-functional features of juxtacellularly labeled thalamic cells and other central neurons with biocytin or Neurobiotin. J Neurosci Meth 65, 113136.[CrossRef][Medline]
Potts PD, Hirooka Y & Dampney RA (1999). Activation of brain neurons by circulating angiotensin II: direct effects and baroreceptor-mediated secondary effects. Neurosci 90, 581594.[CrossRef][Medline]
Renaud LP, Cunningham JT, Nissen R & Yang CR (1993). Electrophysiology of central pathways controlling release of neurohypophysial hormones. Focus on the lamina terminalis and diagonal band inputs to the supraoptic nucleus. Ann N Y Acad Sci 689, 122132.[Medline]
Robinson
MM
&
Evered
MD (1987). Pressor action of intravenous angiotensin II reduces drinking response in rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
252, R754R759.
Saper CB, Reis DJ & Joh T (1983). Medullary catecholamine inputs to the anteroventral third ventricular cardiovascular regulatory region in the rat. Neuroscience Lett 42, 285291.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sawchenko PE & Swanson LW (1983). The organization of forebrain afferents to the paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei of the rat. J Comp Neurol 218, 121144.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schreihofer
AM, Stricker
EM
&
Sved
AF (2000). Nucleus of the solitary tract lesions enhance drinking, but not vasopressin release, induced by angiotensin. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
279, R239R247.
Sly
DJ, McKinley
MJ
&
Oldfield
BJ (2001). Activation of kidney-directed neurons in the lamina terminalis by alterations in body fluid balance. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
281, R1637R1646.
Stocker
SD, Hunwick
KJ
&
Toney
GM (2005). Hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus differentially supports lumbar and renal sympathetic outflow in water-deprived rats. J Physiol
563, 249263.
Stocker
SD, Schiltz
JC
&
Sved
AF (2004). Acute increases in arterial blood pressure do not reduce plasma vasopressin levels stimulated by angiotensin II or hyperosmolality in rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
287, R127R137.
Stocker
SD, Stricker
EM
&
Sved
AF (2001). Acute hypertension inhibits thirst stimulated by ANG II, hyperosmolality, or hypovolemia in rats. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
280, R214R224.
Stocker
SD, Stricker
EM
&
Sved
AF (2002). Arterial baroreceptors mediate the inhibitory effect of acute increases in arterial blood pressure on thirst. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
282, R1718R1729.
Tanaka J, Kaba H, Saito H & Seto K (1986). Subfornical organ efferents influence the activity of median preoptic neurons projecting to the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus in the rat. Exp Neurol 93, 647651.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tanaka J, Nomura M, Kariya K, Nishimura J & Kimura F (1993). Median preoptic neurons projecting to the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus are sensitive to blood pressure changes. Brain Res 605, 338341.[CrossRef][Medline]
Tanaka J, Saito H & Kaba H (1987). Subfornical organ and hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus connections with median preoptic nucleus neurons: an electrophysiological study in the rat. Exp Brain Res 68, 579585.[Medline]
Tanaka J, Ushigome A, Matsuda M & Saito H (1995). Responses of median preoptic neurons projecting to the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus to osmotic stimulation in Wistar-Kyoto and spontaneously hypertensive rats. Neurosci Lett 191, 4750.