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Aldosterone-induced salt appetite requires HSD2 neurons
Silvia Gasparini, Lila Peltekian, Miriam C. McDonough, Chidera J.A. Mitchell, Marco Hefti, Jon M. Resch, Joel C. Geerling
Silvia Gasparini, Lila Peltekian, Miriam C. McDonough, Chidera J.A. Mitchell, Marco Hefti, Jon M. Resch, Joel C. Geerling
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Research Article Endocrinology Neuroscience

Aldosterone-induced salt appetite requires HSD2 neurons

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Abstract

Excessive aldosterone production increases the risk of heart disease, stroke, dementia, and death. Aldosterone increases both sodium retention and sodium consumption, and increased sodium consumption may worsen end-organ damage in patients with aldosteronism. Preventing this increase could improve outcomes, but the behavioral mechanisms of aldosterone-induced sodium appetite remain unclear. In rodents, we previously identified aldosterone-sensitive neurons, which express the mineralocorticoid receptor and its prereceptor regulator, 11-β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 2 (HSD2). In the present study, we identified HSD2 neurons in the human brain and then used a mouse model to evaluate their role in aldosterone-induced salt intake. First, we confirmed that dietary sodium deprivation increases aldosterone production, salt intake, and HSD2 neuron activity. Next, we showed that continuous chemogenetic stimulation of HSD2 neurons causes a large and specific increase in salt intake. Finally, we used dose-response studies and genetically targeted ablation of HSD2 neurons to show that these neurons are necessary for aldosterone-induced salt intake. Identifying HSD2 neurons in the human brain and establishing their necessity for aldosterone-induced salt intake in mice improves our understanding of appetitive circuits and highlights this small cell population as a therapeutic target for moderating dietary sodium.

Authors

Silvia Gasparini, Lila Peltekian, Miriam C. McDonough, Chidera J.A. Mitchell, Marco Hefti, Jon M. Resch, Joel C. Geerling

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Figure 2

Sodium deprivation and chemogenetic stimulation increase HSD2 neuron activity and salt consumption.

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Sodium deprivation and chemogenetic stimulation increase HSD2 neuron act...
(A and B) Feeding mice low-sodium chow (<0.01% Na, n = 3) for 6 days increased the percentage of Fos-immunoreactive HSD2 neurons (*P = 0.0025 versus control mice with ad libitum access to 0.3% Na chow). (C) Dietary sodium deprivation also caused mice to consume more saline (*P = 0.0042 versus 3% NaCl intake during previous access to 0.3% Na chow). (D) Acute chemogenetic activation of HSD2 neurons by injection of clozapine-N-oxide (CNO, 1 mg/kg i.p.) increased saline intake (*P = 0.0490). (E–J) CNO (1 mg/kg, 60 minutes prior to perfusion) caused Fos activation of HSD2 neurons expressing Cre-conditional hM3Dq-mCherry. (K and L) Using an osmotic minipump to continuously infuse CNO (0.5 mg/kg/h) produced a larger increase in saline intake in mice with hM3Dq-mCherry expression (*P = 0.0297 versus mCherry controls) without changing water intake (P = 0.7675). Two-tailed t-tests were used for all comparisons in this figure.

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