Abstract

Male rat motoneurons innervating the pubococcygeus muscle were located in the ventral nucleus of lamina IX at the sixth lumbar (L6) and first sacral (S1) spinal cord segments. Retrograde labeling with horseradish peroxidase-wheat germ agglutinin was transported up to second-order dendrites and revealed that these motoneurons have a "U-shaped arborization" of dendrites toward the intermediolateral and intermediomedial nuclei area of lamina VII. This dendritic organization makes a wide "final common path" that probably integrates afferent information from several sources, accounting for the participation of the pubococcygeus muscle in autonomic and somatic processes, such as those related to micturition and reproduction. Castration produced a decrement in the morphometry of these motoneurons. A main effect was a decrement in dendritic length. Steroid replacement indicated that testosterone and estradiol, but not dihydrotestosterone, are able to induce a recovery of morphometric alterations. However, estrogen induced recovery after 2 weeks of treatment, whereas testosterone took 4 weeks. Thus, it is proposed that supraspinal aromatization of testosterone in the male central nervous system might be an important process for the appropriate organization of the pubococcygeus muscle motoneurons and that estradiol seems to need a shorter time of action than testosterone because of differential up-regulation and down-regulation of steroid receptors.

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