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High Salt Intake Increases Blood Pressure via...
Journal article

High Salt Intake Increases Blood Pressure via BDNF-Mediated Downregulation of KCC2 and Impaired Baroreflex Inhibition of Vasopressin Neurons

Abstract

The mechanisms by which dietary salt promotes hypertension are unknown. Previous work established that plasma [Na(+)] and osmolality rise in proportion with salt intake and thus promote release of vasopressin (VP) from the neurohypophysis. Although high levels of circulating VP can increase blood pressure, this effect is normally prevented by a potent GABAergic inhibition of VP neurons by aortic baroreceptors. Here we show that chronic high salt intake impairs baroreceptor inhibition of rat VP neurons through a brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)-dependent activation of TrkB receptors and downregulation of KCC2 expression, which prevents inhibitory GABAergic signaling. We show that high salt intake increases the spontaneous firing rate of VP neurons in vivo and that circulating VP contributes significantly to the elevation of arterial pressure under these conditions. These results provide the first demonstration that dietary salt can affect blood pressure through neurotrophin-induced plasticity in a central homeostatic circuit.

Authors

Choe KY; Han SY; Gaub P; Shell B; Voisin DL; Knapp BA; Barker PA; Brown CH; Cunningham JT; Bourque CW

Journal

Neuron, Vol. 85, No. 3, pp. 549–560

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

February 4, 2015

DOI

10.1016/j.neuron.2014.12.048

ISSN

0896-6273

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