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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 7

Effect of catecholaminergic neuron ablation on aldosterone-induced salt intake.

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Effect of catecholaminergic neuron ablation on aldosterone-induced salt ...
(A) Intact distribution of TH-immunoreactive neurons (white) after bilateral injections of AAV-mCherry-DIO-dtA into the NTS of a Cre– control mouse. (B) Few TH+ neurons remained in Th-IRES-Cre+ experimental mice. Scale bar: 100 μm. In both A and B, HSD2 neurons (blue) are unaffected. (C) Genetically targeted ablation reduced the number of catecholaminergic neurons (*P = 0.04 by 2-tailed t test, relative to Cre– littermates) without altering the number of HSD2 neurons (P = 0.2886). (E–G) Effects of catecholaminergic neuron ablation on 3% NaCl and water intake in mice receiving s.c. aldosterone infusion (1,000 ng/h). Insets in E and G show P = 0.7120 and P = 0.3315, respectively, by 2-tailed t test versus Cre– littermates.

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