Abstract

Oestrogen is a key factor in the remodelling of uterine sympathetic nerves during puberty and the oestrous cycle; these nerves are influenced by changes in their target uterine tissue. The magnitude of oestrogen-induced responses might however be influenced by the maturation stage of sympathetic nerve fibres, the age of the neurons and/or the developmental state of the uterus. We have therefore compared the sympathetic innervation of the uterus following chronic oestrogen treatment of infantile/prepubertal and young adult intact and ovariectomised rats. Treatment of infantile/prepubertal rats resulted in the complete loss of intrauterine noradrenaline (NA)-labelled sympathetic nerves and a marked reduction in the total NA content in the uterine horn. Chronic treatment of young adult rats had little effect. To examine whether the age of the neurons or the degree of development of the uterus determined responsiveness of nerves to oestrogen, we assessed the effects of oestrogen on the sympathetic reinnervation of intraocular transplants of young adult uterine myometrium into ovariectomised adult host rats. Early treatment (10 days post-transplantation) resulted in less sympathetic innervation than late treatment (30 days post-transplantation). Measurements of nerve growth factor (NGF) levels in the uterine horn of control rats before and after puberty and following infantile/prepubertal chronic oestrogen treatment and acute oestrogen treatment of young adult rats revealed a coordinated increase between the growth of the uterus and NGF protein levels. Thus, developing and recently regrown sympathetic nerves are more susceptible to oestrogen-induced changes in the uterus than mature nerves, differential susceptibility is not related to the age of the neurons or the developmental state of the uterus and changes in NGF protein do not account for the differential susceptibility of developing and mature uterine sympathetic nerve fibres to oestrogen. Growing sympathetic fibres are more vulnerable to oestrogen than mature fibres and nerve fibres that have been in contact for longer periods with their target become less susceptible to oestrogen.

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