The Subfornical Organ is the Primary Locus of Sodium-Level Sensing by NaxSodium Channels for the Control of Salt-Intake Behavior
Open Access
- 20 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 24 (42) , 9276-9281
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.2795-04.2004
Abstract
Dehydration causes an increase in the sodium (Na) concentration and osmolarity of body fluid. For Na homeostasis of the body, controls of Na and water intake and excretion are of prime importance. However, the system for sensing the Na level within the brain that is responsible for the control of Na- and water-intake behavior remains to be elucidated. We reported previously that the Nax channel is preferentially expressed in the circumventricular organs (CVOs) in the brain and that Nax knock-out mice ingest saline in excess under dehydrated conditions. Subsequently, we demonstrated that Nax is a Na-level-sensitive Na channel. Here we show that the subfornical organ (SFO) is the principal site for the control of salt-intake behavior, where the Nax channel is the Na-level sensor. Infusion of a hypertonic Na solution into the cerebral ventricle induced extensive water intake and aversion to saline in wild-type animals but not in the knock-out mice. Importantly, the aversion to salt was not induced by the infusion of a hyperosmotic mannitol solution with physiological Na concentration in either genotype of mice. When Nax cDNA was introduced into the brain of the knock-out mice with an adenoviral expression vector, only animals that received a transduction of the Nax gene into the SFO among the CVOs recovered salt-avoiding behavior under dehydrated conditions. These results clearly show that the SFO is the center of the control of salt-intake behavior in the brain, where the Na-level-sensitive Nax channel is involved in sensing the physiological increase in the Na level of body fluids.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nax sodium channel is expressed in non-myelinating Schwann cells and alveolar type II cells in miceNeuroscience Letters, 2002
- Resurgence of Sodium Channel ResearchAnnual Review of Physiology, 2001
- ThirstNutrition, 2000
- Hypothalamic integration of body fluid regulation.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Efficient generation of recombinant adenoviruses using adenovirus DNA-terminal protein complex and a cosmid bearing the full-length virus genome.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Identification of neural pathways activated in dehydrated rats by means of Fos-immunohistochemistry and neural tracingBrain Research, 1994
- Thirst induced by increasing brain sodium concentration is mediated by brain angiotensinBrain Research, 1994
- Comparison of firing patterns in oxytocin- and vasopressin-releasing neurones during progressive dehydrationBrain Research, 1978
- Sensors for antidiuresis and thirst—osmoreceptors or CSF sodium detectors?Brain Research, 1978
- Evidence for a dual central role for angiotensin in water and sodium intakeNature, 1974