Neuroendocrine modulation and repercussions of female reproductive aging

被引:85
作者
Wise, PM [1 ]
Smith, MJ [1 ]
Dubal, DB [1 ]
Wilson, ME [1 ]
Rau, SW [1 ]
Cashion, AB [1 ]
Böttner, M [1 ]
Rosewell, KL [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kentucky, Coll Med, Dept Physiol, Lexington, KY 40536 USA
来源
RECENT PROGRESS IN HORMONE RESEARCH, VOL 57: REPRODUCTIVE HORMONES & HUMAN HEALTH | 2002年 / 57卷
关键词
D O I
10.1210/rp.57.1.235
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The menopause marks the end of a woman's reproductive life. During the postmenopausal period, plasma estrogen concentrations decrease dramatically and remain low for the rest of her life, unless she chooses to take hormone replacement therapy. During the past 20 years, we have learned that changes in the central nervous system are associated with and may influence the timing of the menopause in women. Recently, it has become clear that estrogens act on more than just the hypothalamus, pituitary, ovary, and other reproductive organs. In fact, they play roles in a wide variety of nonreproductive functions. With the increasing fife span of humans from approximately 50 to 80 years and the relatively fixed age of the menopause, a larger number of women will spend over one third of their lives in the postmenopausal state. It is not surprising that interest has increased in factors that govern the timing of the menopause and the repercussions of the lack of estrogen on multiple aspects of women's health. We have used animal models to better understand the complex interactions between the ovary and the brain that lead to the menopause and the repercussions of the hypoestrogenic state. Our results show that when rats reach middle age, the patterns and synchrony of multiple neurochemical events that are critical to the preovulatory gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) surge undergo subtle changes. The precision of rhythmic pattern of neurotransmitter dynamics depends on the presence of estradiol. Responsiveness to this hormone decreases in middle-aged rats. The lack of precision in the coordination in the output of neural signals leads to a delay and attenuation of the lureinizing hormone surge, which lead to irregular estrous cyclicity and, ultimately, to the cessation of reproductive cycles. We also have examined the impact of the lack of estrogen on the vulnerability of the brain to injury. Our work establishes that the absence of estradiol increases the extent of cell death after stroke-like injury and that treatment with low physiological levels of estradiol are profoundly neuroprotective. We have begun to explore the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie this novel nonreproductive action of estrogens. In summary, our studies show that age-related changes in the ability of estradiol to coordinate the neuroendoctine events that lead to regular preovulatory GnRH surges contribute to the onset of irregular estrous cycles and eventually to acyclicity. Furthermore, we have shown that the lack of estradiol increases the vulnerability of the brain to injury and neurodegeneration.
引用
收藏
页码:235 / 256
页数:22
相关论文
共 107 条
[1]   Gender and risk of autoimmune diseases: Possible role of estrogenic compounds [J].
Ahmed, SA ;
Hissong, BD ;
Verthelyi, D ;
Donner, K ;
Becker, K ;
Karpuzoglu-Sahin, E .
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 1999, 107 :681-686
[2]   GONADOTROPIN RESPONSES TO NALOXONE MAY DEPEND UPON SPONTANEOUS ACTIVITY IN NORADRENERGIC NEURONS AT THE TIME OF TREATMENT [J].
AKABORI, A ;
BARRACLOUGH, CA .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1986, 362 (01) :55-62
[3]   EFFECTS OF MORPHINE ON LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SECRETION AND CATECHOLAMINE TURNOVER IN THE HYPOTHALAMUS OF ESTROGEN-TREATED RATS [J].
AKABORI, A ;
BARRACLOUGH, CA .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1986, 362 (02) :221-226
[4]   DAY NIGHT VARIATION IN PREPRO VASOACTIVE INTESTINAL PEPTIDE PEPTIDE HISTIDINE ISOLEUCINE MESSENGER-RNA WITHIN THE RAT SUPRACHIASMATIC NUCLEUS [J].
ALBERS, HE ;
STOPA, EG ;
ZOELLER, RT ;
KAUER, JS ;
KING, JC ;
FINK, JS ;
MOBTAKER, H ;
WOLFE, H .
MOLECULAR BRAIN RESEARCH, 1990, 7 (01) :85-89
[5]  
Bottner M., 2001, Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, V27, P1165
[6]   GLUTAMATE - A MAJOR EXCITATORY TRANSMITTER IN NEUROENDOCRINE REGULATION [J].
BRANN, DW .
NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 1995, 61 (03) :213-225
[7]   RELATION OF ATTENUATED PROESTROUS LUTEINIZING-HORMONE SURGES IN MIDDLE-AGED FEMALE RATS TO IN-VITRO PITUITARY GONADOTROPIN-RELEASING-HORMONE RESPONSIVENESS [J].
BRITO, AN ;
SAYLES, TE ;
KRIEG, RJ ;
MATT, DW .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY, 1994, 130 (05) :540-544
[8]  
Butcher RL, 1981, DYNAMICS OVARIAN FUN, P253
[9]   Age-related changes in the diurnal rhythm of CRH gene expression in the paraventricular nuclei [J].
Cai, AH ;
Wise, PM .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM, 1996, 270 (02) :E238-E243
[10]  
Cashion A. B., 2001, Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, V27, P1940