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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol (January 30, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00869.2007
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Submitted on December 4, 2007
Accepted on January 25, 2008

The trajectory of sensory pathways from the lamina terminalis to the insular and cingulate cortex; a neuroanatomical framework for the generation of thirst

Jacob Harvey Hollis1*, Michael J. McKinley2, Moyra D'Souza3, Juliane Kampe3, and Brian J. Oldfield1

1 Physiology, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; , Australia
2 Howard Florey Institute of Experimental Physiolology and Medicine, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia
3 Physiology, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jacob.hollis{at}med.monash.edu.au.

The pathways involved in the emotional aspects of thirst, the arousal and affect associated with the generation of thirst and the motivation to obtain satiation, have been studied but remain poorly understood. Rats were therefore injected with the neurotropic virus pseudorabies into either the insular or cingulate cortex. After 2 days of infection pseudorabies-positive neurons were identified within the thalamus and lamina terminalis. In a separate group of rats, the retrograde tracer cholera toxin subunit b (CTb) was used in combination with either isotonic (0.15 M NaCl) or hypertonic (0.8 M NaCl) saline (i.p. 1 mL/100 g b.w.). Rats injected with CTb into the insular cortex and stimulated with hypertonic saline had increased numbers of Fos/CTb double-positive neurons in the paraventricular, rhomboid, and reuniens thalamic nuclei, whereas those rats injected with CTb into the cingulate cortex and challenged with hypertonic saline had increased numbers of Fos/CTb double-positive neurons in the medial part of the mediodorsal, interanteromedial, anteromedial, and ventrolateral part of the laterodorsal thalamic nuclei. Rats injected with CTb into the dorsal midline of the thalamus and challenged with hypertonic saline had increased numbers of Fos/CTb double-positive neurons within the OVLT, median preoptic nucleus, and insular cortex, but not the subfornical organ. A small proportion of the CTb-positive neurons in the OVLT were immunopositive for transient receptor potential vanilloid 1. These results identify functional thalamocortical pathways involved in relaying osmotic signals to the insular and cingulate cortex and may provide a neuroanatomical framework for the emotional aspects of thirst.







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