Vasopressin release and drinking induced by intracranial injection of angiotensin II in monkey

Abstract
The effects of intracerebral injection of angiotensin II (AII) on both water intake and arginine-vasopressin (AVP) release were tested on unanesthetized rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). Injection of 10(-10) mol of peptide was administered with a cannula microinjection system stereotaxically implanted into different diencephalic structures. The preoptic area, anterior part of third ventricle, caudate nucleus, and septum appeared to be the injection sites most effective in eliciting both drinking behavior and AVP release when the animal did not have access to water. On the contrary, when water was presented, AVP release was blocked after AII microinjections in the preoptic area and the third ventricle. No drinking was observed after microinjection in the supraopticus nucleus although AVP release was stimulated. These data suggest that AII might be effective in the regulation of water balance by centrally controlling both the input (drinking) and the output (ADH secretion) of water.