Abstract

Catecholamines (CA) play an important role in the regulation of GnRH neurons in adults, and it is probable that they control GnRH-neuron development. Migration of GnRH neurons was evaluated in male and female rats at the 17th embryonic day (E17) and E21, following the daily treatment of their pregnant mothers from the 11th to the 16th and 20th day of gestation with alpha-methyl-para-tyrosine (alphaMPT), an inhibitor of catecholamine synthesis. High-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection (HPLC-ED) was used to specify the alphaMPT-induced CA depletion. There was a 50-70% decrease in dopamine and noradrenaline content in the nose and in the brain of alphaMPT-treated foetuses, proving the efficacy of this pharmacological model. Immunohistochemistry was used to evaluate the percentage (%) of GnRH neurons along their migration pathway from the vomeronasal organ (VNO) in the nose to the septo-preoptic area in the forebrain which is considered as an index of neuron migration. Special attention was paid to the topographic relationships of GnRH neurons with catecholaminergic fibres. These were observed in apposition with GnRH neurons in the entrance to the forebrain. In CA-deficient foetuses, the percentage of GnRH neurons located in the rostral regions extending from the VNO to the septum was greater than in controls. However, no statistically significant difference was found in the forebrain which extended from the septum to the retrochiasmatic area. In conclusion, these data suggest that endogenous catecholamines stimulate the GnRH neuron migration in ontogenesis.

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