Abstract

Female mice were divided into androgenized (AF) and control (CF) groups. The AF mice were injected subcutaneously with testosterone propionate (Tp) and the CF mice with sesame oil at 5 days of age. Mammotropes (PRL cells) and somatotropes (GH cells) in the adenohypophyses of these mice when they became adults were studied with immunohistochemistry and morphometry by light microscopy correlated with routine electron microscopy. In CF mice, almost all of the PRL-immunoreactive cells (about 43% of all parenchymal cells) were type I (classical) PRL cells, and almost all of the GH-immunoreactive cells (about 30% of all parenchymal cells) were type I (classical) GH cells. Type II PRL cells accounted for about 0.4% of parenchymal cells, and type II GH cells were about 2.5% of all parenchymal cells. In AF mice, the percentages of PRL and GH cells were not significantly different from those of CF mice. Mammosomatotropes (Ms cells) in both groups were less than 1% of all parenchymal cells. Numbers of all parenchymal, PRL and GH cells, however, were increased significantly in AF mice when compared to those in CF, because the adenohypophysis was increased in volume in AF mice. Type I PRL cells were larger in AF than in CF. The ultrastructure suggested that type I PRL cells may show increased PRL synthesis and secretion in AF mice. Furthermore, AF mice, in which the hypothalamus is masculinized by the neonatal treatment with Tp, retained feminine characteristics in the population and size of PRL cells and GH cells in the adenohypophysis.

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