Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to identify which catecholamine-containing neurons (norepinephrine (NE) or dopamine (DA)) and which central nervous system (CNS) region(s) innervated by them might participate in the pressor and drinking responses produced by central drug stimulation. Forebrain NE was reduced in rats by injecting 4 μg of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) into the ascending noradrenergic bundles. Spinal cord NE was depleted by intracisternal injection of 50 μg 6-OHDA. Depletion of forebrain DA was produced by bilateral injection of 4 μg 6-OHDA into the substantia nigra of desipramine-pretreated rats. Pressor responses to various doses of angiotensin II (AII), carbachol or hyperosmolar NaCl injected into the lateral ventricles (LVT); and drinking responses to LVT AII and carbachol were examined. Injection of 6-OHDA into the noradrenergic bundles reduced telencephalic and hypothalamic NE by more than 80% without significantly affecting brain DA or spinal cord NE. Intracisternal 6-OHDA depleted spinal cord NE by 80% and forebrain NE by 20–25% without reducing brain DA. Injection of 6-OHDA into the substantia nigra reduced telencephalic DA by 86% and NE by 29% without significantly affecting NE in other CNS regions. Substantia nigra 6-OHDA injected animals evidenced attenuated drinking to both LVT AII and carbachol. Pressor responses to LVT AII, carbachol and hypertonic saline were largely unaffected. Almost complete depletion of brain and/or spinal cord NE failed to alter centrally mediated drinking or pressor responses. These data indicate that the integrity of brain DA neurons is required for the behavioral but not hypertensive responses produced by central drug stimulation.
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