Abstract

The role of the medial forebrain area (vertical limb of the diagonal band, medial septum and medial nucleus accumbens) in the control of oxytocin secretion in lactating rats was investigated. Electrical stimulation of the medial forebrain evoked a reproducible rise in intramammary pressure, equivalent to that caused by i.v. injection of 1 mU oxytocin. No presser effect accompanied this response. Radio-immunoassay of plasma samples showed that stimulation caused a significant rise in the concentration of circulating oxytocin. The effects of changing the parameters of stimulation to the medial forebrain were compared with those evoked by stimulation of the neural stalk. The optimal frequency for stimulation of the forebrain was found to be four-fold lower (10–20 Hz) than that for stimulation of the neural stalk (50 Hz). During continuous prolonged stimulation of the forebrain (20 Hz; 2 min) only a single transient response was obtained, whereas a protracted response was obtained as a result of prolonged stimulation of the stalk. Recordings were made from antidromically identified neurosecretory cells in the supraoptic nucleus. Electrophysiological responses to electrical stimulation of the medial forebrain were characterized by two main features. (1) Single-pulse stimulation produced only a small excitation (one or two action potentials), while high-frequency trains produced a profound facilitation of this response, with each pulse evoking short-duration ‘bursting’ behaviour in the supraoptic neurons. (2) During long trains of stimulation this frequency-dependent facilitation declined and could only be renewed after a period of rest. The study indicates that the medial forebrain provides a major excitatory afferent input to the oxytocin-secreting neurons of the supraoptic nucleus, and that the pulse-like secretion of oxytocin following medial forebrain stimulation results from the complex facilitatory and adaptive characteristics of this input.

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