High salt intake enhances swim stress-induced PVN vasopressin cell activation and active stress coping

•High salt intake (HSI) is proposed to enhance responsivity to psychogenic stress.•HSI is an osmotic stress that increases corticosterone & stress coping behaviors.•HIS enhanced PVN & amygdala neuronal activation by psychogenic stress.•Amygdalar vasopressin receptor 1 activation likely media...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychoneuroendocrinology 2018-07, Vol.93, p.29-38
Hauptverfasser: Mitchell, N.C., Gilman, T.L., Daws, L.C., Toney, G.M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•High salt intake (HSI) is proposed to enhance responsivity to psychogenic stress.•HSI is an osmotic stress that increases corticosterone & stress coping behaviors.•HIS enhanced PVN & amygdala neuronal activation by psychogenic stress.•Amygdalar vasopressin receptor 1 activation likely mediates swimming behavior.•HSI may contribute towards the development of stress-linked psychiatric disorders. Stress contributes to many psychiatric disorders; however, responsivity to stressors can vary depending on previous or current stress exposure. Relatively innocuous heterotypic (differing in type) stressors can summate to result in exaggerated neuronal and behavioral responses. Here we investigated the ability of prior high dietary sodium chloride (salt) intake, a dehydrating osmotic stressor, to enhance neuronal and behavioral responses of mice to an acute psychogenic swim stress (SS). Further, we evaluated the contribution of the osmo-regulatory stress-related neuropeptide arginine vasopressin (VP) in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), one of only a few brain regions that synthesize VP. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of high dietary salt intake on responsivity to heterotypic stress and the potential contribution of VPergic-mediated neuronal activity on high salt-induced stress modulation, thereby providing insight into how dietary (homeostatic) and environmental (psychogenic) stressors might interact to facilitate psychiatric disorder vulnerability. Salt loading (SL) with 4% saline for 7 days was used to dehydrate and osmotically stress mice prior to exposure to an acute SS. Fluid intake and hematological measurements were taken to quantify osmotic dehydration, and serum corticosterone levels were measured to index stress axis activation. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) was used to stain for the immediate early gene product c-Fos to quantify effects of SL on SS-induced activation of neurons in the PVN and extended amygdala – brain regions that are synaptically connected and implicated in responding to osmotic stress and in modulation of SS behavior, respectively. Lastly, the role of VPergic PVN neurons and VP type 1 receptor (V1R) activity in the amygdala in mediating effects of SL on SS behavior was evaluated by quantifying c-Fos activation of VPergic PVN neurons and, in functional experiments, by nano-injecting the V1R selective antagonist dGly[Phaa1,d-tyr(et), Lys, Arg]-VP bilaterally into the amygdala prior to the SS. SL increase
ISSN:0306-4530
1873-3360
DOI:10.1016/j.psyneuen.2018.04.003