Abstract

A double-labeling immunofluorescence procedure was used to determine whether progesterone receptor (PR)-immunoreactive (IR) neurons in the preoptic area and hypothalamus of female guinea pigs also contained aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), an enzyme involved in the synthesis of both catecholamines and serotonin. Immunostaining was performed on cryostat sections prepared from ovariectomized guinea pigs primed by estradiol to induce PR. The nuclear presence of PR was visualized by a red fluorescence while the AADC-containing perikarya showed a yellow-green fluorescence. The topographic distribution of AADC-IR neurons was investigated by using a specific antiserum obtained by immunization of rabbits with a recombinant protein beta-galactosidase-AADC in the two regions known to contain the densest populations of estradiol-induced PR-IR cells: the preoptic area and the mediobasal hypothalamus. The localization of PR-IR and AADC-IR cell populations showed considerable overlap in these areas, mainly in the medial and periventricular preoptic nuclei and in the arcuate nucleus. A quantitative analysis of double-labeled cells estimated that about 15% to 23% of AADC-IR cells in the preoptic area and about 11% to 21% of AADC-IR cells in the arcuate nucleus possessed PR. This colocalization persisted throughout the rostrocaudal extent of these areas and represented 3% to 9% of the population of PR-IR cells. These findings provide neuroanatomical evidence that a subset of AADC neurons is directly regulated by progesterone. The exact physiological role of this enzyme in target cells for progesterone is not understood. AADC may be involved in functions other than that for the synthesis of the classical neurotransmitters.

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