Abstract
In view of the role of serotonin in adrenocortical regulation, the effects of depletion of hypothalamic serotonin, using localized injections of the neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine into the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus, on the rise in plasma corticosterone following afferent neural stimulation, were studied. The neurotoxin caused a significant reduction (p less than 0.001) in hypothalamic serotonin content of about 50% during the first month and about 30% up to two months later. Basal and ether stress-induced rises in plasma corticosterone levels were unaffected at all times after this treatment, but responses to stimulation of the sciatic nerve were reduced for up to four weeks (p less than 0.01), recovering at later times. Responses to photic and acoustic stimuli were almost entirely prevented up to four weeks following the treatment (p less than 0.001) but showed a gradual recovery to full, or almost full, adrenocortical responses at eight weeks, following acoustic and photic stimulation respectively. These results demonstrate a differential recovery of the adrenocortical responses, following the neurotoxin injection and indicate that different neural modalities require different 5-HT concentrations in the PVN for the expression of a full adrenocortical response.
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