AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study found that estradiol increases water intake in ovariectomized rats when food is not available, highlighting a new role of this hormone related to thirst regulation.
  • - Different estrogen receptors (ERβ and ERα) have opposing effects: activating ERβ boosts water intake, while ERα tends to reduce it, especially when food is present.
  • - The findings indicate that the fluid-enhancing effects of estradiol are specific to females and suggest that understanding these mechanisms could help in future research on how hormones affect fluid intake.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Although the fluid inhibitory effects of estradiol are well characterized, a dipsogenic role of the hormone was recently identified. In ovariectomized (OVX) rats, unstimulated water intake, in the absence of food, was increased after estradiol treatment.

Methods: The goals for these experiments were to further characterize the fluid enhancing effects of estradiol by determining the estrogen receptor subtype mediating the dipsogenic effect, examining saline intake, and testing for a dipsogenic effect of estradiol in male rats.

Results: Pharmacological activation of estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) increased water intake, in the absence of food, and was associated with changes in postingestive feedback signals. Surprisingly, activation of ERα reduced water intake even in the absence of food. A follow-up study demonstrated that when food was available, co-activation of ERα and ERβ reduced water intake, but when food was not available water intake was increased. In addition, in OVX rats, estradiol increased saline intake through changes in postingestive and orosensory feedback signals. Finally, although estradiol decreased water intake in male rats with access to food, estradiol had no effect on water intake in the absence of food.

Conclusions: These results demonstrate that the dipsogenic effect is mediated by ERβ, the fluid enhancing effects of estradiol generalize to saline, and is limited to females, which implies that a feminized brain is necessary for estradiol to increase water intake. These findings will aid in guiding future studies focused on elucidating the neuronal mechanisms that allow estradiol to both increase and decrease fluid intake.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000530962DOI Listing

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