Abstract

BackgroundIn rats, a sexually dimorphic spinal gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) system in the lumbosacral spinal cord projects to spinal centers that control erection and ejaculation. This system controls the sexual function of adult males in an androgen-dependent manner. In the present study, we assessed the influence of androgen exposure on the spinal GRP system during a critical period of the development of sexual dimorphism.MethodsImmunohistochemistry was used to determine if the development of the spinal GRP system is regulated by the perinatal androgen surge. We first analyzed the responses of neonates administered with anti-androgen flutamide. To remove endogenous androgens, rats were castrated at birth. Further, neonatal females were administered androgens during a critical period to evaluate the development of the male-specific spinal GRP system.ResultsTreatment of neonates with flutamide on postnatal days 0 and 1 attenuated the spinal GRP system during adulthood. Castrating male rats at birth resulted in a decrease in the number of GRP neurons and the intensity of neuronal GRP in the spinal cord during adulthood despite testosterone supplementation during puberty. This effect was prevented if the rats were treated with testosterone propionate immediately after castration. Moreover, treating female rats with androgens on the day of birth and the next day, masculinized the spinal GRP system during adulthood, which resembled the masculinized phenotype of adult males and induced a hypermasculine appearance.ConclusionsThe perinatal androgen surge plays a key role in masculinization of the spinal GRP system that controls male sexual behavior. Further, the present study provides potentially new approaches to treat sexual disorders of males.

Highlights

  • In rats, a sexually dimorphic spinal gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) system in the lumbosacral spinal cord projects to spinal centers that control erection and ejaculation

  • The spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB)-BC neuromuscular system is male-dominant in adults, and this sexual dimorphism is caused by sex differences in perinatal androgen exposure [7, 8]

  • Administration of flutamide demasculinizes the spinal GRP system of neonatal male rats To determine if the development of the sexually dimorphic spinal GRP system was regulated by the androgen surge, we administered the specific androgen receptor (AR) antagonist flutamide to neonatal male rats

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Summary

Introduction

A sexually dimorphic spinal gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) system in the lumbosacral spinal cord projects to spinal centers that control erection and ejaculation This system controls the sexual function of adult males in an androgen-dependent manner. Androgens appear to play an important role in the establishment of SNB motoneuron number [11,12,13,14], somal size [15, 16], and neuromuscular synapse elimination [17], estrogens might be critically involved in SNB dendritic development [18] Taken together, these results suggest that, in the developing SNB-BC neuromuscular system, somal and dendritic growth may occur through separate developmental mechanisms, and that androgens and estrogens act synergistically to support normal masculine SNB dendritic development [8, 18]

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