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Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat

Salt appetite, the primordial instinct to favorably ingest salty substances, represents a vital evolutionary important drive to successfully maintain body fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. This innate instinct was shown here in Sprague-Dawley rats by increased ingestion of isotonic saline (IS) over...

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Autores principales: Greenwood, Michael P., Greenwood, Mingkwan, Paton, Julian F. R., Murphy, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4128734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25111786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104802
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author Greenwood, Michael P.
Greenwood, Mingkwan
Paton, Julian F. R.
Murphy, David
author_facet Greenwood, Michael P.
Greenwood, Mingkwan
Paton, Julian F. R.
Murphy, David
author_sort Greenwood, Michael P.
collection PubMed
description Salt appetite, the primordial instinct to favorably ingest salty substances, represents a vital evolutionary important drive to successfully maintain body fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. This innate instinct was shown here in Sprague-Dawley rats by increased ingestion of isotonic saline (IS) over water in fluid intake tests. However, this appetitive stimulus was fundamentally transformed into a powerfully aversive one by increasing the salt content of drinking fluid from IS to hypertonic saline (2% w/v NaCl, HS) in intake tests. Rats ingested HS similar to IS when given no choice in one-bottle tests and previous studies have indicated that this may modify salt appetite. We thus investigated if a single 24 h experience of ingesting IS or HS, dehydration (DH) or 4% high salt food (HSD) altered salt preference. Here we show that 24 h of ingesting IS and HS solutions, but not DH or HSD, robustly transformed salt appetite in rats when tested 7 days and 35 days later. Using two-bottle tests rats previously exposed to IS preferred neither IS or water, whereas rats exposed to HS showed aversion to IS. Responses to sweet solutions (1% sucrose) were not different in two-bottle tests with water, suggesting that salt was the primary aversive taste pathway recruited in this model. Inducing thirst by subcutaneous administration of angiotensin II did not overcome this salt aversion. We hypothesised that this behavior results from altered gene expression in brain structures important in thirst and salt appetite. Thus we also report here lasting changes in mRNAs for markers of neuronal activity, peptide hormones and neuronal plasticity in supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus following rehydration after both DH and HS. These results indicate that a single experience of drinking HS is a memorable one, with long-term changes in gene expression accompanying this aversion to salty solutions.
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spelling pubmed-41287342014-08-12 Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat Greenwood, Michael P. Greenwood, Mingkwan Paton, Julian F. R. Murphy, David PLoS One Research Article Salt appetite, the primordial instinct to favorably ingest salty substances, represents a vital evolutionary important drive to successfully maintain body fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. This innate instinct was shown here in Sprague-Dawley rats by increased ingestion of isotonic saline (IS) over water in fluid intake tests. However, this appetitive stimulus was fundamentally transformed into a powerfully aversive one by increasing the salt content of drinking fluid from IS to hypertonic saline (2% w/v NaCl, HS) in intake tests. Rats ingested HS similar to IS when given no choice in one-bottle tests and previous studies have indicated that this may modify salt appetite. We thus investigated if a single 24 h experience of ingesting IS or HS, dehydration (DH) or 4% high salt food (HSD) altered salt preference. Here we show that 24 h of ingesting IS and HS solutions, but not DH or HSD, robustly transformed salt appetite in rats when tested 7 days and 35 days later. Using two-bottle tests rats previously exposed to IS preferred neither IS or water, whereas rats exposed to HS showed aversion to IS. Responses to sweet solutions (1% sucrose) were not different in two-bottle tests with water, suggesting that salt was the primary aversive taste pathway recruited in this model. Inducing thirst by subcutaneous administration of angiotensin II did not overcome this salt aversion. We hypothesised that this behavior results from altered gene expression in brain structures important in thirst and salt appetite. Thus we also report here lasting changes in mRNAs for markers of neuronal activity, peptide hormones and neuronal plasticity in supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus following rehydration after both DH and HS. These results indicate that a single experience of drinking HS is a memorable one, with long-term changes in gene expression accompanying this aversion to salty solutions. Public Library of Science 2014-08-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4128734/ /pubmed/25111786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104802 Text en © 2014 Greenwood et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Greenwood, Michael P.
Greenwood, Mingkwan
Paton, Julian F. R.
Murphy, David
Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title_full Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title_fullStr Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title_full_unstemmed Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title_short Salt Appetite Is Reduced by a Single Experience of Drinking Hypertonic Saline in the Adult Rat
title_sort salt appetite is reduced by a single experience of drinking hypertonic saline in the adult rat
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4128734/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25111786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104802
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