Lack of gonadotropin-positive feedback in the male rat is associated with lack of estrogen-induced synaptic plasticity in the arcuate nucleus

被引:27
作者
Horvath, TL
GarciaSegura, LM
Naftolin, F
机构
[1] YALE UNIV,DEPT OBSTET & GYNECOL,NEW HAVEN,CT 06520
[2] YALE UNIV,CTR RES REPROD BIOL,NEW HAVEN,CT 06520
[3] CSIC,INST CAJAL,E-28002 MADRID,SPAIN
关键词
arcuate nucleus; gonadotropins; feedback; gonadal steroids; castration; synaptic plasticity;
D O I
10.1159/000127173
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
We have demonstrated that estrogen induces synaptic reorganization in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus of female rats during the ovarian cycle and proposed that estrogen-induced synaptic retraction plays a role in the disinhibition of gonadotropin secretion that occurs during the afternoon of proestrus. This so-called positive feedback of gonadotropins is developmentally determined. It is present in female rats and absent in males. To confirm the role of the estrogen-induced synaptic retraction in positive feedback, we tested whether administration of estrogen to male rats also fails to induce synaptic remodeling of the arcuate nucleus. Male and female rats were gonadectomized and studied as follows. One month following gonadectomy, animals received either a single injection of estradiol (100 mu g/animal in sesame oil; 12 males and 12 females) or vehicle (6 males and 6 females). Twenty-four hours following injections, all animals in the vehicle-injected group and 6 animals of each sex in the treatment groups were sacrificed, while the rest of the animals were killed 48 h following the hormone injections (6 per group). As expected, quantitative electron microscopic analysis of the female arcuate nuclei revealed that compared to oil-injected controls, estradiol induced drastic decreases in the overall synapse counts by 24 h (121 +/- 10 vs. 74 +/- 5 synapses/1,000 mu m membrane; p < 0.05). Synaptic counts had recovered to control levels by 48 h. On the contrary, in males, estradiol treatment did not cause changes in the total synapse counts at either time. As a further control, the lack of an estrogen-induced gonadotropin surge in long-term castrate males was also confirmed. Our study confirmed that in males estradiol does not alter the net synaptology of the arcuate nucleus or cause gonadotropin positive feedback. This is in clear contradistinction to females which show both synaptic plasticity and gonadotropin-positive feedback upon receiving exogenous or endogenous estrogen. The lack of estrogen-induced synaptic plasticity may be an underlying mechanism in the abolishment of positive gonadotropin, feedback in developing males and the development of constant estrus in aging female rats.
引用
收藏
页码:136 / 140
页数:5
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]   PUBERTAL DEVELOPMENT OF ESTROGEN-RECEPTORS IN THE RAT-BRAIN [J].
BROWN, TJ ;
HOCHBERG, RB ;
NAFTOLIN, F ;
MACLUSKY, NJ .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR NEUROSCIENCE, 1994, 5 (05) :475-483
[2]   GONADAL HORMONE REGULATION OF GLIAL FIBRILLARY ACIDIC PROTEIN IMMUNOREACTIVITY AND GLIAL ULTRASTRUCTURE IN THE RAT NEUROENDOCRINE HYPOTHALAMUS [J].
GARCIASEGURA, LM ;
LUQUIN, S ;
PARDUCZ, A ;
NAFTOLIN, F .
GLIA, 1994, 10 (01) :59-69
[3]   RAPID EFFECTS OF GONADAL-STEROIDS UPON HYPOTHALAMIC NEURONAL MEMBRANE ULTRASTRUCTURE [J].
GARCIASEGURA, LM ;
OLMOS, G ;
TRANQUE, P ;
NAFTOLIN, F .
JOURNAL OF STEROID BIOCHEMISTRY AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1987, 27 (1-3) :615-623
[4]   SYNAPTIC REMODELING IN ARCUATE NUCLEUS AFTER INJECTION OF ESTRADIOL VALERATE IN ADULT FEMALE RATS [J].
GARCIASEGURA, LM ;
BAETENS, D ;
NAFTOLIN, F .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1986, 366 (1-2) :131-136
[5]   LOSS OF SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN RAT ARCUATE NUCLEUS NEURONAL MEMBRANES WITH REPRODUCTIVE AGING [J].
GARCIASEGURA, LM ;
PEREZ, J ;
JONES, E ;
NAFTOLIN, F .
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY, 1991, 112 (01) :125-128
[6]  
HORVATH TL, 1995, CURR OPIN ENDOCRINOL, V2, P186
[7]   IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL EVIDENCE FOR SYNAPTIC CONNECTIONS BETWEEN PRO-OPIOMELANOCORTIN-IMMUNOREACTIVE AXONS AND LH-RH NEURONS IN THE PREOPTIC AREA OF THE RAT [J].
LERANTH, C ;
MACLUSKY, NJ ;
SHANABROUGH, M ;
NAFTOLIN, F .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1988, 449 (1-2) :167-176
[8]  
LEWIS CE, 1994, ANN M SOC NEUR MIAM, P100
[9]  
MATSUMOTO A, 1979, CELL TISSUE RES, V198, P427
[10]  
McEwen BS, 1995, CIBA F SYMP, V191, P52