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Arginine vasopressin does not mediate heat loss in the tail of the rat
Authors:Yong-Lu Yang  Xiao-Song Hu  Wang Zan  Zi-Ling Sheng  Tao Huang  Ya-Jun Wei
Institution:1. Thermoregulation and Inflammation Laboratory, Chengdu Medical College, Chengdu, Sichuan 610083, PR China;2. Department of Physiology, Chengdu Medical College, Chengdu, Sichuan 610083, PR China;3. Traditional Chinese medicine Pharmacy Laboratory, Chengdu Medical College, Chengdu, Sichuan 610083, PR China
Abstract:It has been reported that hypothermia induced by arginine vasopressin (AVP) is brought about by a coordinated response of reduced thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue (BAT) and increased heat loss through the tail of rats. However, it is well known that AVP is one of the strongest peripheral vasoconstrictors. Whether the AVP-induced hypothermia is associated with an increase in heat loss through the tail is questionable. Therefore, the present study assessed the relationship between the effects of AVP on tail skin temperature and the induced hypothermic response, and to determine if peripheral AVP administration increases heat loss from the tail. Core, BAT and tail skin temperature were monitored by telemetry in male Sprague–Dawley rats before and after intraperitoneal administration of AVP or vasopressin receptor antagonist. We also analyzed simultaneously of the time-course of AVP-induced hypothermic response and its relationship with changes in BAT temperature, and effect of AVP on grooming behavior. The key observations in this study were: (1) rats dosed with AVP induced a decrease in heat production (i.e., a reduction of BAT thermogenesis) and an increase of saliva spreading for evaporative heat loss (i.e., grooming behavior); (2) AVP caused a marked decrease in tail skin temperature and this effect was prevented by the peripheral administration of the vasopressin V1a receptor antagonist, suggesting that exogenous AVP does not increase heat loss in the tail of rats; (3) the vasopressin V1a receptor antagonist could elevate core temperature without affecting tail skin temperature, suggesting that endogenous AVP is involved in suppression of thermogenesis, but not mediates heat loss in the tail of rats. Overall, the present study does not support the conclusion of previous reports that AVP increased tail heat loss in rats, because AVP-induced hypothermia in the rat is accompanied by a decrease in tail skin temperature. The data indicate that exogenous AVP-induced hypothermia attributed to the suppression of thermoregulatory heat production and the increase of saliva spreading for evaporative heat loss.
Keywords:Hypothermia  Arginine vasopressin  Heat loss  Tail skin temperature
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