Abstract

The present study was carried out to investigate whether estrogen modulates the drinking response induced by activation of angiotensinergic neural pathways from the subfornical organ (SFO) to the median preoptic nucleus (MnPO). Microinjection of angiotensin II (ANG II, 10 −10 M, 0.2 μl) into the SFO elicited drinking in ovariectomized (OVX) female rats that were treated with either propylene glycol (PG) vehicle or estrogen benzoate (EB). The amount of water intake induced by the ANG II injection was significantly greater in the PG-treated than in the EB-treated animals. In both groups of female rats, previous injections of saralasin (Sar, 10 −10 M, 0.2 μl), a specific ANG II antagonist, into the MnPO resulted in the significant attenuation of the drinking response to ANG II, showing that the ANG II-induced drinking response may be mediated in part by the angiotensinergic SFO projections to the MnPO. Injections of ANG II (10 −10 M, 0.2 μl) into the MnPO caused drinking in both groups, while no significant difference was found between the groups in the amount of water intake. These results suggest that increases in the circulating level of estrogen may attenuate the drinking response induced by ANG II activation of the SFO projections to the MnPO.

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