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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Osmosensitive single neurones in the hypothalamus of unanaesthetized monkeys.

James N. Hayward, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 210, Iss: 4, pp 947-972
TLDR
This work recorded with tungsten micro‐electrodes the activity of single neurones in the supraoptic nucleus (NSO) and adjacent regions of the hypothalamus while repeatedly injecting solutions of varying tonicity into the common carotid artery of trained, unanaesthetized monkeys who accepted the experimental restraints without anxiety.
Abstract
1. We recorded with tungsten micro-electrodes the activity of single neurones in the supraoptic nucleus (NSO) and adjacent regions of the hypothalamus while repeatedly injecting solutions of varying tonicity into the common carotid artery of trained, unanaesthetized monkeys who accepted the experimental restraints without anxiety. 2. Intracarotid injections of mildly hypertonic solutions of sodium chloride produced a characteristic behavioural response during and immediately after injection: e.e.g. ‘arousal,’ lip and tongue smacking, chewing, irregular sniffing respiration and associated mildly increased movement of face, eyes and body. 3. Of the 130 cells analysed during hypertonic intracarotid injections, 105 (81%) were osmosensitive. Twenty-five (19%) of the cells studied during similar injections were non-osmosensitive. On the basis of the anatomical location of the cells, the pattern of discharge to intracarotid osmotic stimuli and the response to arousing sensory stimuli, we divided the osmosensitive cells into two major groups, ‘specific’ and ‘non-specific’ osmosensitive cells. 4. Fifty-two (50%) of the osmosensitive cells we labelled ‘specific’ because they responded to an intracarotid injection of hypertonic sodium chloride, generally did not respond to non-noxious arousing sensory stimuli and were located in or near the supraoptic nucleus. We found two subtypes of these ‘specific’ osmosensitive cells: (a) twenty-one (20%) NSO cells with ‘biphasic’ responses, that is, acceleration followed by inhibition; (b) thirty-one (30%) cells in the immediate perinuclear zone of the NSO with ‘monophasic’ responses, subdivided into twenty-one (20%) cells that accelerated and ten (10%) that were inhibited. 5. Fifty-three osmosensitive cells (50%), located diffusely in the anterolateral hypothalamus, were ‘non-specific’, responding both to intracarotid injections of hypertonic sodium chloride and also to sensory stimuli that were mildly arousing. Two groups of ‘non-specific’ osmosensitive cells showed monophasic responses; thirty-five (34%) cells accelerated and seventeen (16%) of them were inhibited. 6. The ‘monophasic’ specific osmosensitive neurones lying in the immediate perinuclear zone of the supraoptic nucleus in the primate could conceivably be the ‘osmoreceptors’ of Verney. The ‘biphasic’ specific osmosensitive neurones in the NSO may well represent the secretory cells of this system. From our data, the ‘non-specific’ osmosensitive neurones, scattered diffusely in the anterolateral hypothalamus, have little to do with osmoregulation. Some of these cells located in the perinuclear zone of the NSO could act as interneurones, however, conveying afferent input to the osmoreceptor-secretory complex of the supraoptic nucleus.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrophysiology of hypothalamic magnocellular neurones secreting oxytocin and vasopressin

TL;DR: The hypothesis that nerve cells are true secreting cells, and act upon one other and upon the cells of other organs by the passage of a chemical substance of the nature of a ferment or proferment from the first cell to the second is formed.
Book ChapterDOI

The regulation of vasopressin function in health and disease.

TL;DR: The osmoregulation of AVP can be readily understood by analyzing the relationship between plasma AVP and plasma osmolality under different conditions of water balance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrophysiological differentiation of oxytocin-and vasopressin-secreting neurones

TL;DR: It is suggested that the rate of vasopressin secretion into the circulation largely depends on the proportion of vasipressin neurones firing phasically, their firing rates within the phases and the duration and degree of synchronization of the phases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of firing patterns in oxytocin- and vasopressin-releasing neurones during progressive dehydration

TL;DR: Both vasopressin and oxytocin neurones are activated during chronic dehydration, but there is a marked difference in the pattern of their response, which is important in increasing the occurrence of short interspike intervals and thus facilitating hormone release.
Journal ArticleDOI

Morphological and electrophysiological classification of hypothalamic supraoptic neurons

TL;DR: The firing patterns of activated OT and VP neurons often differ, but can transiently appear indistinguishable in vivo and especially in vitro, and classification in vitro without immunochemical labelling may be aided by the presence of phasic bursting and by the differential response of these neurons to certain neurochemicals or to stimulation of certain inputs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Study of unitary activity in the supraoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the supraoptic nucleus cells in addition to being subject to excitation by both neural and humoral agents are under inhibitory control from structures within the cerebellum, midbrain and thalamus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of intracarotid and intraventricular injections of hypertonic solutions on electrical activity of the rabbit brain.

TL;DR: Repeated intracarotid injections of hypertonic saline eventually caused, in more than half of the animals, seizures which always started in the amygdala and/or hippocampus and often remained localized there.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional significance of osmosensitive units in the anterior hypothalamus.

Robert J. Joynt
- 01 Jun 1964 - 
TL;DR: The concept of “osmoreceptors” has been introduced by Verney2 to explain part of this mechanism and he concluded that these receptor elements were in the region of the anterior hypothalamus and were responsible for monitoring the osmolarity of the blood and then determining the rate of antidiuretic hormone release by the posterior lobe of the pituitary.
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