Abstract

Quantitative receptor autoradiography using Bolton-Hunter iodinated substance P (SP) was used to localize specific sites in the rat hypothalamus. The amount of SP and neurokinin A (NkA) in extracts from discrete areas of the hypothalamus was measured using specific radioimmunoassays. A high density of SP binding sites was observed in the perimeter of the magnocellular paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei, while the magnocellular nuclei themselves possessed a low receptor density. In control animals, the number of SP binding sites was also low in the arcuate nucleus and the median eminence. Substance P and NkA peptide concentrations were highest in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), decreasing in the following order: arcuate nucleus (Arc) > median eminence (ME) > supraoptic nucleus (SON) > subfornical organ (SFO). In animals given 340 mmol/l NaCl instead of tap water to drink for 12 days, significant increases in the number of SP binding sites occurred in the medial parvocellular subdivision of the PVN, periamygdaloid cortex, medial preoptic nucleus, Arc, and ME, but other hypothalamic areas were unaffected. In saline-treated animals, significant increases in SP and NkA peptide concentrations were observed in the ME, while in the SFO only the concentration of NkA increased significantly. In the SON, substance P and neurokinin A levels were doubled, whereas in the PVN and Arc no changes in peptide levels were observed. Chronic osmotic stimulation is associated with lowered circulating levels of adrenocorticotropin releasing hormone (ACTH), and the present data further substantiate the hypothesis that hypothalamic tachykinin-containing neuronal terminals are centrally involved in the inhibition of anterior pituitary ACTH release observed during chronic osmotic stimulation.

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