Relationship between prandial drinking behavior and supersensitivity of salivary glands after superior salivatory nucleus lesions in rats
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Prandial drinking Saliva Salivary glands Superior salivatory nucleus
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Juan M. J. Ramos, María Elena Castillo, Amadeo Puerto. Relationship between prandial drinking behavior and supersensitivity of salivary glands after superior salivatory nucleus lesions in rats. Physiology & Behavior, 224 (2020) 113022. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113022]
Sponsorship
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Madrid, Spain); ERDF (PSI2010–14979 and PSI2013–41098-P)Abstract
Prandial drinking, an increase in the number of drinking responses and secondary or non-homeostatic polydipsia
in the presence of dry food, is typically associated with a deficit in salivary secretion. This study investigates the
degree of salivary gland supersensitivity to pilocarpine administration after lesions to the superior salivatory
nucleus (SSN), the site of origin of the parasympathetic preganglionic neurons that innervate the submandibularsublingual (S-S) salivary glands. The main aim was to determine if there is a relationship between the degree of
glandular supersensitivity, as an index of secretory deficit, and the development of prandial drinking in lesioned
rats. Results showed that following SSN lesions two subgroups of rats were obtained. One subgroup exhibited
prandial drinking but the other was similar to the control group. The SSN-lesioned prandial drinking subgroup
presented significantly greater supersensitivity than the SSN-lesioned non-prandial drinking rats; the nonprandial drinking subgroup, in turn, presented significantly more supersensitivity than controls. Additionally, SS supersensitivity observed in rats that exhibited prandial drinking due to the sectioning of chorda tympani
efferent axons was compared to that observed in rats exhibiting prandial drinking due to SSN lesions. It was
found that both groups presented the same S-S supersensitivity curve. These results indicate that SSN lesions
produce a gradation of S-S supersensitivity values that appear to run parallel to the degree of glandular secretory
deficit caused by the lesions. Thus, only the rats with greater secretory deficit (greater supersensitivity) develop
prandial drinking. These data support the idea that there is in fact a functional link between the lateral reticular
formation of the brainstem (the region associated with the SSN) and S-S salivary glands.