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Volume 17, Number 1,
Issue of January 1, 1997
pp. 363-371
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Electrophysiological and Immunocytochemical Evidence for a
cGMP-Mediated Inhibition of Subfornical Organ Neurons by Nitric
Oxide
Matthias Rauch1,
Herbert A. Schmid1,
Jan deVente2, and
Eckhart Simon1
1 Max-Planck-Institut für Physiologische und
Klinische Forschung, W. G. Kerckhoff-Institut, 61231 Bad Nauheim,
Germany, and 2 University of Limburg, Maastricht, The
Netherlands
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
The activation of neurons in the subfornical organ (SFO) by
angiotensin II (AngII) is well established and is widely regarded as
the basis for the AngII-induced increase in water intake. Application of the nitric oxide (NO) donor sodium nitroprusside (SNP) led to an
inhibition of the spontaneous electrical activity in 96% of the
neurons sensitive for SNP (n = 50). In addition,
the firing rate in 60% of the neurons inhibited by SNP decreased in
response to superfusion with the natural substrate of the NO synthase
(NOS) L-arginine whereas 70% increased their frequency
after application of the NOS blocker
NG-monomethyl-L-arginine
(L-NMMA; n = 10). The inhibitory effect of SNP could be mimicked by application of membrane-permeable 8-Br-cGMP. The presence of nNOS, the neuronal isoform of NOS, was
demonstrated immunocytochemically and using the NADPH-diaphorase technique on SFO slices. Using a highly selective antibody against cGMP
in formaldehyde-fixed tissue, the NO donors SNP,
3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1), and
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine
(SNAP) caused a strong increase in cGMP formation when applied under
the same conditions as used for the electrophysiological recordings.
These electrophysiological results suggest an important role for NO in
SFO-mediated responses and offer a plausible explanation for the
in vivo-observed opposite effects of AngII and NO on
water intake.
Key words:
sodium nitroprusside;
nitric oxide;
thirst;
drinking;
neuron;
osmoregulation;
rat;
electrophysiology;
subfornical organ;
angiotensin II
INTRODUCTION
The subfornical organ (SFO) represents one of the
neural circumventricular organs (CVO) lacking a blood-brain barrier
and has been implicated as a key structure in osmoregulation (McKinley et al., 1990
). One of the best characterized functions of the SFO of
mammals is the induction of drinking in response to blood-borne angiotensin II (AngII) (Fitzsimons, 1979
). The dipsogenic effect of
AngII has been shown to correlate with an increase in electrical activity of the majority of SFO neurons in response to AngII in mammals
and birds (Fitzsimons, 1980
; Phillips, 1987
; Simon et al., 1992
).
Electrical stimulation of the SFO results in an increase in water
intake (Smith et al., 1995
) and elevated blood pressure (Ishibasi and
Nicolaidis, 1981; Ferguson et al., 1984
) in rats. Conversely, it has
been shown that the direct application of the nitric oxide (NO) donor
sodium nitroprusside (SNP) to the SFO by microapplication inhibits the
AngII-induced water intake in rats (Nicolaidis and Fitzsimons, 1975
).
Autoradiographical studies have demonstrated the presence of receptors
for AngII in the SFO of rats (Mendelsohn et al., 1984
), and
histochemical studies have shown that neuronal NO synthase (nNOS) is
present in all CVOs, including the SFO in large quantities, using
immunocytochemical and NADPH-diaphorase techniques (Jurzak et al.,
1994
). These results led to the suggestion that the activity of SFO
neurons that were excited by AngII might also be affected by locally
released NO.
The aim of this study was to investigate the possible effect of nitric
oxide on the electrical activity of spontaneously active neurons in the
rat SFO in a slice preparation. In a similar investigation on slices of
the rat spinal cord (Pehl and Schmid, 1997
), SNP was shown to be a
potent and specific NO donor on the same experimental setup and was
also used, therefore, in this study to investigate the effect of NO.
Based on the assumption that NOS is present and still functioning in
our in vitro slice preparation, increasing or decreasing the
production of endogenous NO, by superfusing the slice with
L-arginine, the natural substrate of the NOS, or with
NG-monomethyl-L-arginine
(L-NMMA), a selective blocker of the NOS, should result
accordingly in the same or opposite effects as caused by the NO
donor.
In an immunocytochemical study using an antibody that was specifically
designed to recognize cGMP in paraformaldehyde-fixed tissues (deVente
et al., 1989; deVente and Steinbusch, 1992) the NO-dependent production
of cGMP was investigated, because cGMP is known to be the second
messenger formed by the NO-dependent activation of soluble guanylyl
cyclase (Murad, 1994
; Garthwaite and Boulton, 1995
). Using the same
in vitro slice preparation as for the electrophysiological
recordings, the amount of cGMP produced was examined after incubating
the SFO slices for 10 min with three different NO donors. To determine
whether the SFO neurons that possibly produce NO are identical to the
neurons that respond to it, immunocytochemical double labeling was
performed on identical sections using antibodies against NOS as well as
cGMP.
The possible neuronal relevance of an NO-induced increase in cGMP
content in the SFO was assessed electrophysiologically by applying the
membrane-permeable analog 8-Br-cGMP on neurons that showed
responsiveness to NO, and the resulting change in activity was compared
to the effect of the NO donor on identical cells.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The materials and methods were, with minor modifications, the
same as described previously (Schmid and Simon, 1992
). Briefly, adult
male Wistar rats (180-270 gm) were decapitated, and their brains were
quickly removed and superfused with ice-cold artificial CSF (aCSF) of
the following composition (in mM): NaCl 124, KCl 5, NaH2PO4 1.2, MgSO4 1.3, CaCl2 1.2, NaHCO3 26, glucose 10, pH: 7.4, equilibrated with 95% O2/5% CO2, 290 mOsm/kg.
The brain was trimmed to a square block containing the entire
hypothalamus, from which a coronal section was cut by hand at the level
of the anterior commissure. A slice of the body of the fornix,
containing the entire SFO, was cut by hand and preincubated in aCSF at
35°C for 1 hr. Slices were transferred to the recording chamber and fixed to the bottom of the chamber with a small metal weight. The
gold-plated recording chamber was made from solid brass and, when
perfused with aCSF, contained a fluid volume of ~0.7 ml. The chamber
was constantly perfused with aCSF at a rate of 1.6 ml/min. ACSF
entering the recording chamber was prewarmed to the same temperature as
the solution already present in the chamber. The temperature was kept
constant at 37°C using a Peltier element. Extracellular recordings
were made from SFO neurons using glass-coated platinum-iridium
electrodes. The SFO could easily be identified by its protrusion into
the third ventricle and the lateral blood vessels lining the organ on
both sides. AngII (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) and SNP (Schwarz
Pharma, Monheim, Germany) were added to the aCSF shortly before the
application. SNP stock solutions were prepared fresh on the
experimental day from preweighed vials, stored on ice, and protected
from light until use. After a stable recording from a single neuron had
been established, its responsiveness was tested by switching to a
perfusion solution containing the drug under consideration. The
recorded action potentials were amplified and displayed on a storage
oscilloscope (Gould, Germany) and were analyzed, after passing a window
discriminator (World Precision Instruments), with custom-made software
(Spike2 from Cambridge Electronic Design) on a personal computer.
Normally 10 ml of aCSF containing the drug was superfused per stimulus,
except for experiments on the stimulation or inhibition of NOS, in
which 20 ml was used. The concentrations of AngII (10
8 to
10
7 M) were chosen according to previous
experiments (Schmid and Simon, 1992
) showing that this concentration
induced clearly visible responses with minimum desensitization. SNP was
used at a concentration between 10
6 and 10
3
M. 8-Br-cGMP (Sigma), L- and D-NMMA
(Alexis, Grünberg, Germany), and L- and
D-arginine (Sigma) were applied at a concentration of
10
3 M. From the continuously recorded rate
meter counts, the average discharge rate of each neuron was evaluated
for 60 sec before the stimulus. This value (referred to as
"control") was subtracted from all subsequent changes in firing
rate, and the results were expressed as "percent change of
control." The latency of a response comprised the time between the
occurrence of the drug in the recording chamber until the start of the
excitatory or inhibitory responses. If the averaged change of discharge
rate during the entire response time was reversibly larger than ±20%,
the neuron was considered sensitive to the applied substance; if no
obvious change in the spontaneous activity was observed, the firing
rate was averaged over a 500 sec period after the drug entered the
recording chamber and compared to the control values. Mean values in
the text are given with SEM.
For the immunohistological study, the preparation of the SFO was the
same as described for the electrophysiological recordings. The SFO
slices were incubated for 40 min in 2 ml of aCSF + 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX; Sigma) at 37°C placed in multiwell tissue culture chambers under an atmosphere of 5% CO2/95%
O2. The NO donors SNP, SNAP (Alexis), and SIN-1 (Cassella,
Frankfurt, Germany) were added for the last 10 min to a final
concentration of 10
4 M. The incubation was
terminated by adding 2 ml of an ice-cold fixative solution (final
concentration 4% formaldehyde in PBS for 1 hr at 4°C), followed by 2 hr post-fixation in cold PBS (containing 4% formaldehyde and 10%
sucrose) and, finally, washed for 30 min in PBS + 10% sucrose.
Immediately thereafter, 10-µm-thick sections were cut on a cryostat
at
20°C, thawed on poly-L-lysine-coated slides, and
processed immediately for immunocytochemistry. The slides were
air-dried for 20 min at room temperature, rehydrated, and washed three
times for 5 min each in PBS. The sections were incubated overnight at
4°C with cGMP antiserum (deVente et al., 1989) from sheep [1:6000 in
PBS + 0.5% Triton X-100 (PBS-T)] and nNOS antiserum (Alexis) from
rabbit (1:1000 in PBS-T). The next day, sections were washed three
times for 5 min each in PBS and incubated for 75 min at room
temperature with FITC-conjugated donkey anti-sheep immunoglobulins and
Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulins, respectively. For the
double-labeling experiments, the incubation procedures were done
separately in the following order: cGMP antibody from sheep, nNOS
antiserum from rabbit, Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulins,
and FITC-conjugated donkey anti-sheep immunoglobulins.
Finally, the slides were washed three times for 15 min each in PBS and
mounted in PBS/glycerol (1:1 v/v; Cityfluor). Photographs were taken on
a Zeiss Axioskop using a Kodak Ektachrome 400 film, with an adjustment
of 1600 ASA at the camera.
The NADPH-diaphorase staining was performed as described previously
for rats (Jurzak et al., 1994
), i.e., the slices were the same as
already used for the immunocytochemistry, thus allowing a direct
comparison of nNOS and NADPH-diaphorase staining on identical sections. Briefly, the sections containing the SFO were washed three
times for 5 min each in phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4, and then
incubated for 2 hr in 0.1 M PB, pH 8.0, containing 55 µM NADPH, 0.12 mM nitroblue tetrazolium, and
0.3% Triton X-100 (all from Sigma) at 37°C in the dark. After the
incubation, sections were rinsed in PB, pH 7.4, air-dried, and
coverslipped with Entellan (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). Photographs
were taken on a Zeiss Axioskop using Kodak Ektachrome 400 film.
RESULTS
Immunocytochemical study and NADPH-diaphorase staining
The level of cGMP in the rat SFO after different treatments is
illustrated by the brightness of the immunocytochemical staining in
Figure 1a-d. Each of the four
SFOs from which these sections were taken was treated the same except
for the incubation with the NO donors. Figure 1a shows the
coronal section of a rat SFO, which was not incubated with an NO donor
and thus represents the control level of cGMP present in this tissue.
After 10 min incubation with the NO donor SNP (10
4
M; Fig. 1b) or SNAP (10
4
M; Fig. 1c), the cGMP immunoreactivity was
increased. The increase in cGMP label was not restricted to neuronal
somata, but could also be observed in fibers and non-neuronal
(ependymal) cells throughout the SFO. In line with previous experiments
on spinal cord slices (Pehl and Schmid, 1996), SIN-1 (Fig.
1d) was the least effective NO donor and caused at equimolar
concentrations only a small increase in cGMP content.
Fig. 1.
Immunocytochemical and NADPH-diaphorase
staining of 10-µm-thick sections of the rat subfornical organ (SFO).
a-d, Comparison of cGMP immunoreactivity
after normal treatment (control, a) and after 10 min
incubation with sodium nitroprusside (SNP; b),
S-nitroso-N-acetyl-DL-penicillamine (SNAP; c), and 3-morpholinosydnonimine (SIN-1;
d). Markedly increased levels of cGMP are visible after
treatment with NO donors. Scale bar (shown in b): 200 µm. e, f, Double labeling of an
identical SFO section for neuronal NO synthase (nNOS; e)
and cGMP (f) immunoreactivity. One cell
labeled by both antibodies is marked with a small arrow, whereas the large arrows mark cells exclusively stained
by the cGMP antibody or nNOS antibody, indicating a codistribution
rather than a colocalization. Scale bar (shown in
f): 40 µm. g, h,
Colocalization of NADPH-diaphorase staining (g)
with nNOS immunoreactivity (h) in an identical section
of the SFO. Examples of cells labeled by both techniques are marked
with arrows. Scale bar (shown in h): 40 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (106K GIF file)]
Microfluorometrical measurements of a coronal section of the medial
SFO, which had been treated for 10 min with SNP, calculated a 209%
increase in cGMP content (normalized to the surface area) as compared
to the control (Fig. 1a,b).
The distribution of the cGMP immunoreactivity was not uniform
throughout the SFO. With the exception of the rostral part of the SFO,
in which the cGMP immunoreactivity was evenly distributed over the
entire section, the medial and caudal part of the SFO displayed less
cGMP fluorescence in the central region as in the more lateral parts of
the SFO. This regional difference was the same in the controls and in
SFO slices that had been treated with an NO donor, although in the
treated tissues these regional differences were more apparent (Fig.
1a-d). Figure 1, e and
f, shows high-power magnifications of the same cross section
of the ventral part of the SFO that contacts the third ventricle. In
this section, a double labeling for nNOS (Fig. 1e) and cGMP
(Fig. 1f) was performed, and it showed
that nNOS and cGMP are codistributed in the same regions of the SFO;
but on the cellular level, the nNOS and cGMP staining was almost never
colocalized in identical cells. The large arrows point at two cells
that showed either a strong NOS or a strong cGMP staining, although
very rarely double labeled cells could also be observed (small
arrow).
Figure 1g shows an NADPH-diaphorase staining of the same
section of the SFO, in which the NOS had previously been visualized immunocytochemically, using an antibody against the neuronal isoform of
the NOS (Fig. 1h). NOS-immunopositive neurons could be seen in the SFO, clearly distinguished from unlabeled cells in the surrounding tissue, indicating the presence of nNOS in the rat SFO.
Immunolabeling as well as NADPH-diaphorase staining was achieved in
cell bodies and axonal and/or dendrite processes with a complete colocalization (see arrows for cells marked with both
techniques). The brown/blue color and the staining intensity of the
NADPH-diaphorase were similar to the labeling in other brain regions
such as the cerebellum, known to contain nNOS, but it was clearly
different from the labeling that occurred in hypothalamic regions,
including the supraoptic nucleus (SON), nucleus paraventriculus (PVN),
and scattered neurons in the cortex, where individual neurons showed heavy and black staining.
Electrophysiological study
Only those neurons that showed a relatively stable spontaneous
activity and that could be tested for their responsiveness to AngII as
well as SNP were included in these results. Furthermore, the effects of
both agents had to be reversible to be considered for quantitative
evaluation. The mean spontaneous frequency of all 95 neurons tested was
5.5 ± 0.2 spikes/sec. With respect to the AngII responsiveness of
the investigated sample of neurons, 83% (n = 95) were
excited and the remaining neurons were unresponsive, i.e., not a single
neuron was inhibited. The excitatory effect of AngII was visible after
a latency of 61 ± 5 sec, produced a mean increase averaged from
the beginning to the end of the response in firing rate of 3.0 ± 0.2 Hz (i.e., 54%), and had a duration of 436 ± 19 sec.
Fifty-one percent of the investigated neurons (n = 95)
were inhibited by SNP when applied at concentrations of
10
5 to 10
3 M. Only 2% of the
neurons were excited, and the remaining 47% were unaffected. For the
inhibitory effect, we obtained a mean decrease, averaged from the
beginning to the end of the response in the discharge rate, of
1.8 ± 0.1 Hz (i.e.,
32%) with a 110 ± 18 sec latency
and a 464 ± 23 sec duration. Eighty-three percent of the neurons
that were inhibited by SNP reacted to AngII with an increase in
activity (Table 1). Figure 2 shows the
continuous activity of a rat SFO neuron that was tested consecutively
with both substances. The spontaneous activity increased rapidly in response to 10
7 M AngII and decreased
asymptotically to the previous frequency after the end of the
application. Superfusion with SNP (10
4 M)
reversibly decreased the firing rate of the same neuron, also with a
rapid onset and a slow recovery to the base frequency. It could also be
shown that the AngII-induced excitation could be antagonized by SNP and
that the SNP-induced inhibition could be antagonized by AngII. Figure
3a is an example of a neuron that was
reversibly inhibited by SNP. Although this neuron did not generate
action potentials anymore in response to SNP, superfusion with AngII in
the continuous presence of SNP caused a long-lasting excitation of this
cell. In a different neuron, the inhibitory effect of SNP, which was
weak under control conditions, became even more pronounced in this
neuron in the continuous presence of AngII, which caused the usual
excitatory response (Fig. 3b). Qualitatively similar results
were obtained in each of the 4 other neurons tested.
Table 1.
Summary of the effects of AngII and SNP on neurons of the
rat subfornical organ
|
AngII
excitation |
AngII no effect |
Total |
|
| SNP
inhibition |
40 |
8 |
48 |
| SNP no
effect |
37 |
8 |
45 |
| SNP
excitation |
2 |
0 |
2 |
|
| Total |
79 |
16 |
95 |
|
Fig. 2.
Continuous rate meter recording of a
spontaneously active neuron from the rat subfornical organ showing the
antagonistic effect of angiotensin II (Ang II)
and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) on the same neuron. AngII
and SNP were applied via superfusion during the times indicated by the
horizontal bars.
[View Larger Version of this Image (13K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
a, The inhibitory effect of sodium
nitroprusside (SNP) on this neuron could be antagonized
by angiotensin II (Ang II) in the presence of the
NO donor. b, Repeated application of SNP was able to
antagonize reversibly the excitatory effect of continuously applied
AngII on this neuron.
[View Larger Version of this Image (36K GIF file)]
The inhibition of the discharge rate by SNP, examined in a range
between 10
6 and 10
3 M, was
dose-dependent (Fig. 4). The threshold concentration of SNP causing an effect was 10
5 M, as
illustrated by the inset. This relationship is obvious in the
continuous rate meter recording, which indicates that higher concentrations of SNP were able to cause reductions in the firing rate
to 0 spikes/sec. Additionally, this neuron was excited by superfusion
with AngII (10
8 M).
Fig. 4.
Dose-dependent effect of sodium nitroprusside
(SNP) on an angiotensin II (Ang
II)-sensitive neuron, which was consecutively superfused
during the times indicated by the horizontal bars. The
inset shows the averaged dose-response curve of the
inhibitory effect of SNP on rat subfornical organ neurons.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
The question of whether the inhibitory response seen after superfusion
with SNP was specific to NO was addressed further by activating or
inactivating the production of endogenous NO via activation or
inhibition of the endogenous NOS. This set of experiments was based on
the assumption that endogenous NOS was still active under our in
vitro slice conditions and that this enzyme produced sufficient
amounts of NO to affect the firing rate of neurons located in the
vicinity of the NO-producing cells. As shown in Figure
5, superfusion with the NOS blocker L-NMMA
(10
3 M) increased the firing rate of the
neuron, in contrast to the inhibitory effect of the natural substrate
of the NOS (L-arginine, 10
3 M). A
decrease in the firing rate by L-arginine on neurons that were inhibited by SNP was obtained in 6 out of 10 cases, with the other
4 neurons showing no effect. With respect to the mean response
frequency change, the quality of the inhibition by
L-arginine was not significantly different from that caused
by SNP for the same neurons (paired t test,
p = 0.33). Blocking the NO-producing enzyme with
L-NMMA caused an excitation in 70% of the SNP-sensitive neurons, and this effect could be reversed by the application of
L-arginine. The biologically inactive
D-enantiomers of the NOS blocker (D-NMMA,
10
3 M) and the NOS substrate
(D-arginine, 10
3 M) had no
effects on the discharge rate of each of the neurons examined
(n = 6) that showed responsiveness to the respective L-forms.
Fig. 5.
Continuous rate meter recording of a spontaneously
active neuron from the subfornical organ, demonstrating the effects of the natural substrate for NOS L-arginine
(L-Arg), the false substrate NG-monomethyl-L-arginine
(L-NMMA), and their biologically inactive D-enantiomers (D-Arg,
D-NMMA), which serve as controls. The
horizontal bars represent the times of the respective
superfusion.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Superfusion of 8-Br-cGMP (10
3 M), a
membrane-permeable analog of cGMP, mimicked the inhibitory effect in 8 out of 13 SNP-sensitive neurons, whereas the 5 remaining neurons were
not affected. The continuous rate meter recording of a rat SFO neuron,
which was reversibly inhibited by SNP (10
3 M)
and also reversibly inhibited by 8-Br-cGMP (10
3
M), is shown in Figure 6. The statistical
comparison between the mean inhibitory effects of both substances
applied at identical effective concentrations to the same neurons
(n = 8) showed no significant differences (paired
t test, p = 0.88).
Fig. 6.
Continuous rate meter recording of a spontaneously
active neuron from the rat subfornical organ. During the times
indicated by the horizontal bars, sodium nitroprusside
(SNP) or the membrane-permeable analog 8-Br-cGMP
(8 Br-cGMP) was applied via superfusion.
8-Br-cGMP mimics the inhibitory effect of the NO donor SNP on the same
neuron.
[View Larger Version of this Image (14K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
The majority of rat SFO neurons responded to an application
of AngII with an increase in electrical activity. Not a single neuron
was inhibited by AngII, confirming previously published electrophysiological studies using the same preparation (Schmid and
Simon, 1992
; Li and Ferguson, 1993
). This result strongly argues for a
direct action of AngII on the majority of SFO neurons and against a
major inhibitory interaction of AngII-sensitive neurons and other
neurons within the rat SFO. Functionally, this excitation is regarded
as the neuronal basis for the AngII-induced increase in water intake
(Felix and Akert, 1974
; Phillips and Felix, 1976
).
In vivo studies on the effects of AngII and the NO
donor SNP applied directly to the SFO have demonstrated the inhibitory effect of SNP on the AngII-induced water intake (Nicolaidis and Fitzsimons, 1975
). Central application of the NOS substrate
L-arginine into the fourth ventricle or into the preoptic
area also reduced the AngII-induced water intake (Calapai et al., 1992
,
1994
), although presumably this response did not involve the SFO.
Extrapolating from the well characterized effect that the AngII-induced
water intake is attributable to an excitatory effect of this peptide on
the activity of SFO neurons (Felix and Akert, 1974
; Phillips and Felix,
1976
; Simon et al., 1992
), a substance that inhibits SFO-mediated water
intake should accordingly have an inhibitory effect on neuronal
activity, possibly on the same cells. Focusing only on the neurons that
were excited by AngII, our electrophysiological results demonstrated
that 95% of the SNP-responsive neurons were inhibited by the NO donor.
Furthermore, it could be shown that AngII and SNP have antagonistic
effects on the same neurons, because the AngII-induced excitation could still be observed during the inhibitory action of continuously applied
SNP and the inhibitory effect of SNP could still be observed during an
ongoing excitatory effect of AngII. Therefore, the opposite and
antagonistic effects of AngII and SNP on the electrical activity of
largely identical SFO neurons might represent the cellular basis for
the antagonistic effects observed on water intake.
The fact that NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons are present in the rat
SFO stresses the functional relevance of the electrophysiological results. Hope et al. (1991)
showed the identity of neuronal
NADPH-diaphorase and NOS in many central neurons, and Jurzak et al.
(1994)
demonstrated a colocalization of NADPH diaphorase reaction
product and immunohistological nNOS antibody staining in the rat SFO.
In addition, the NOS is still functionally active in our slice
preparation as demonstrated by the inhibitory effect of the NOS
substrate L-arginine and the activation of SNP-sensitive
neurons in response to the NOS blocker L-NMMA. The
specificity of these results is underlined by the ineffectiveness of
the biologically inactive D-enantiomers. These in
vitro results strongly suggest that the neuronal activity of SFO
neurons, and thus the SFO-mediated water intake, is inhibited by
endogenous NO that is produced and released within the SFO itself.
With regard to the transduction mechanism of NO, it is known that NO
activates the soluble form of the guanylyl cyclase in many neuronal
systems (Murad, 1994
; Garthwaite and Boulton, 1995
), leading to an
increased intracellular concentration of cGMP. A strong NO-induced
elevation of cGMP levels could be shown in rat SFO slice preparations
using an antibody that detects cGMP in fixed tissues. The second
messenger cGMP influences neuronal activity via direct or indirect
mechanisms involving different membrane channels (Garthwaite and
Boulton, 1995
) and has been shown recently to cause excitatory as well
as inhibitory responses in different laminae of spinal cord slices
(Pehl and Schmid, 1997
). Therefore, using the membrane-permeable analog
8-Br-cGMP, we could mimic the inhibitory effect of SNP on neurons in
the rat SFO, providing electrophysiological evidence for the
involvement of cGMP in the inhibitory signal transduction pathway of NO
in the SFO.
Biochemical data showed that the increased intracellular
Ca2+ concentration that is necessary to activate the NOS
would simultaneously inhibit any guanylyl cyclase activity (Vincent and
Hope, 1992
), which also suggests that cells containing NOS are
presumably not identical to cells that respond to NO with an increase
in cGMP content. This hypothesis has been confirmed by showing that,
despite the fact that NADPH-diaphorase-positive and cGMP-positive
cells were located in the same regions of the rat brain, the
NADPH-diaphorase-positive cells and cGMP-positive cells were
complementary rather than identical (Southam and Garthwaite, 1993
).
This codistribution rather than colocalization of nNOS and cGMP was
also demonstrated in this study in the rat SFO, by showing that
NADPH-diaphorase and nNOS-positive cells were identical, whereas
cGMP-positive cells were located in close proximity, but with very few
exceptions never identical, to these cells.
Based on these data, it can be speculated that the spontaneously active
neurons in the rat SFO that are responsive to AngII as well as SNP are
presumably not identical with the NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons,
but are located in the vicinity of those cells. This means that
AngII-sensitive neurons in the rat SFO are subject to inhibition by NO
via the release of NO from adjacent NOS-containing neurons.
The question that physiological stimulus triggers the release of NO
within the SFO in vivo has not been addressed so far, although it can be predicted that it should be an antidipsogenic stimulus and/or an inhibitory stimulus on AngII-sensitive neurons in
the rat SFO. Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) has been shown to cause
effects that are generally opposite to the actions of AngII (Kleinert
et al., 1984
; Harris et al., 1987
; Saavedra, 1992
; Wright and Harding,
1992
), including an antagonistic effect on AngII-induced water intake
(Ehrlich and Fitts, 1991
) and an inhibitory effect on SFO neurons of
rats but not ducks (Hattori et al., 1988
; Schmid and Simon, 1992
;
Schmid et al., 1995
). Immunocytochemical evidence showing that ANF
(deVente et al., 1989) as well as NO (this study) can increase cGMP
production in the SFO and the fact that the ANF-induced increase in
cGMP levels in the immature rat brain can be partly blocked by an NOS
inhibitor (deVente and Steinbusch, 1992) are compatible with the notion
that ANF, in addition to its receptor-intrinsic guanylyl cyclase
activity, could possibly inhibit SFO neurons indirectly via the release
of NO within the SFO.
In summary, these results suggest that NO is a major inhibitory
modulator in the rat SFO and that its inhibitory effect is mediated by
NO that is produced and released within the SFO under as yet unknown
physiological conditions. It is suggested that the inhibitory effect of
NO depends on the elevation of cGMP in SFO neurons that are generally
not identical to the cells producing NO. Functionally, these results
imply that the inhibitory effect of NO on AngII-sensitive neurons in
the rat SFO offers a plausible explanation for the antidipsogenic
effect of SNP on AngII-induced water intake (Nicolaidis and Fitzsimons,
1975
) without the necessity of assuming opposite mechanical effects
caused by the hypotensive and hypertensive effects of SNP and AngII,
respectively, on "thirst-neurons" in the SFO.
FOOTNOTES
Received Aug. 30, 1996; revised Oct. 11, 1996; accepted Oct. 21, 1996.
This work was supported by Grant Si 230/8-1 from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft. We greatly appreciate the help and technical assistance of G. Jurat.
These experiments comply with Principles of Animal Care,
publication No. 85-23, revised 1985, from National Institutes of Health
and also with the current laws of the country in which the experiments
were performed.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Herbert A. Schmid,
Max-Planck-Institut für Physiologische und Klinische Forschung, W. G. Kerckhoff-Institut, Parkstrasse 1, 61231 Bad Nauheim,
Germany.
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