Abstract

The distribution of arginine vasopressin-associated neurophysin (neurophysin II) immuno-reactivity was investigated in normal and mutant house mice during development and after various gonadal steroid manipulations. During postnatal development of normal mice dense networks of neurophysin II immunoreactivity in the lateral septal nucleus and lateral habenular nucleus appeared earlier in male than in female mice, with an adult pattern of immunoreactivity being attained by 8 weeks and 12 weeks of age, respectively. The neurophysin II immunoreactivity in the male was denser than that in female mice. After gonadectomy of adult normal mice there was a gradual loss of neurophysin II immunoreactivity in the lateral septum and lateral habenula over a period of 15 weeks. In hypogonadal mice, a mutant in which gonadal development is arrested postnatally due to a deficiency in hypothalamic gonadotrophin releasing hormone, no immunoreactive neurophysin II could be detected in the lateral septum or lateral habenula. A pattern of neurophysin II immunoreactivity similar to that in normal control mice was observed in hypogonadal mice which had been implanted for 4 weeks with silicone elastomer capsules containing testosterone or oestradiol-17β, but not 5α-dihydrotestosterone or progesterone. Stimulation of gonadal development and endogenous steroid production in hypogonadal mice by third ventricular grafts of preoptic area tissue from normal neonatal animals also produced a normal pattern of neurophysin II immunoreactivity in the lateral septum and lateral habenula. In the androgeninsensitive testicular feminized mouse immunoreactive neurophysin II was undetectable in the lateral septum and lateral habenula. Treatment of testicular feminized mice with oestradiol-17β, but not progesterone, produced a normal pattern of neurophysin II immunoreactivity. The main immunohistological findings were confirmed by radioimmunoassay of tissue extracts which showed that the concentration of arginine vasopressin in lateral septum was far greater in normal males than females and was undetectable in hypogonadal mice; no oxytocin could be detected in the septum of normal or hypogonadal mice. These results show that the expression of neurophysin II immunoreactivity in the lateral septum and lateral habenula of the mouse brain is dependent on the presence of aromatizeable androgens or oestrogens.

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