Abstract

Adult male rats have substantially more motoneurons than do females in two motor nuclei in the lumbar spinal cord: the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) and the dorsolateral nucleus (DLN). Previous studies of the development of the SNB revealed that the sex difference in SNB motoneuron number is established through a differential motoneuron death which is under the control of androgens. In this study the development of the sexually dimorphic DLN was examined to test the hypothesis that early androgen action also determines the sex difference in DLN motoneuron number by regulating normally occurring motoneuron death. Because SNB motoneurons may migrate from the DLN, quantitative examination of DLN development was necessary in order to understand more completely the cellular mechanisms contributing to the establishment of dimorphic motoneuron number. At 5 days before birth, the number of motoneurons in the DLN is significantly higher than in adulthood in both sexes, and no sex difference is present. There is a decrease in motoneuron numbers prenatally in both sexes, which is consistent with the emigration of presumptive SNB motoneurons. Motoneuron number declines differentially through the first week of postnatal life and by postnatal day 10 motoneuron numbers are in the adult range and the sex difference is fully expressed. Females lose significantly more DLN motoneurons than males through a differential death as revealed by the higher incidence of degenerating cell profiles. Females treated with testosterone propionate have a male-typical motoneuron loss and incidence of degenerating cells. These results indicate that steroid hormones establish the sex difference in DLN motoneuron number by regulating normally occurring cell death.

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