[HTML][HTML] Vasopressin and the regulation of thirst

DG Bichet - Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 2018 - karger.com
DG Bichet
Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 2018karger.com
Recent experiments using optogenetic tools allow the identification and functional analysis
of thirst neurons and vasopressin producing neurons. Two major advances provide a
detailed anatomy of taste for water and arginine-vasopressin (AVP) release:(1) thirst and
AVP release are regulated not only by the classical homeostatic, intero-sensory plasma
osmolality negative feedback, but also by novel, extero-sensory, anticipatory signals. These
anticipatory signals for thirst and vasopressin release converge on the same homeostatic …
Abstract
Recent experiments using optogenetic tools allow the identification and functional analysis of thirst neurons and vasopressin producing neurons. Two major advances provide a detailed anatomy of taste for water and arginine-vasopressin (AVP) release:(1) thirst and AVP release are regulated not only by the classical homeostatic, intero-sensory plasma osmolality negative feedback, but also by novel, extero-sensory, anticipatory signals. These anticipatory signals for thirst and vasopressin release converge on the same homeostatic neurons of circumventricular organs that monitor the composition of the blood;(2) acid-sensing taste receptor cells (which express polycystic kidney disease 2-like 1 protein) on the tongue that were previously suggested as the sour taste sensors also mediate taste responses to water. The tongue has a taste for water. The median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) of the hypothalamus could integrate multiple thirst-generating stimuli including cardiopulmonary signals, osmolality, angiotensin II, oropharyngeal and gastric signals, the latter possibly representing anticipatory signals. Dehydration is aversive and MnPO neuron activity is proportional to the intensity of this aversive state.
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