Τρίτη 8 Αυγούστου 2017

Median preoptic glutamatergic neurons promote thermoregulatory heat-loss and water consumption in mice

Abstract

The median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) serves an important role in the integration of water/electrolyte homeostasis and thermoregulation, but we have a limited understanding these functions at a cellular level. Using Cre-Lox genetic targeting of Channelrhodospin 2 in VGluT2-ires-Cre transgenic mice, we examined the effect of glutamatergic MnPO neuron stimulation in freely-behaving mice while monitoring drinking behaviour and core temperature. Stimulation produced a strong hypothermic response in 62% (13/21) of mice (core temperature: −4.6 ± 0.5°C, P = 0.001 vs. controls) caused by cutaneous vasodilation. Stimulating glutamatergic MnPO neurons also produced robust drinking behaviour in 82% (18/22) of mice. Mice that drank during stimulation consumed 912 ± 163 μL (N = 8) during a 20 min trial in the dark phase, but markedly less during the light phase (421 ± 83 μL, P = 0.0025). Also, drinking during stimulation was inhibited as water was ingested, suggesting pre-systemic feedback gating of drinking. Both hypothermia and drinking during stimulation occurred in 50% of mice tested. Anatomical mapping of the stimulation sites showed that sites associated with hypothermia were more anteroventral than those associated with drinking, although there was substantial overlap. Thus, activation of separate but overlapping populations of glutamatergic MnPO neurons produces effects on drinking and autonomic thermoregulatory mechanisms, providing a structural basis for their frequently being coordinated (e.g. during hyperthermia).

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