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1.
The intracellular conversion of testosterone to estradiol by the aromatase enzyme complex is an important step in many of the central actions of testosterone. In rats, estrogen given alone, or in combination with dihydrotestosterone, mimics most of the behavioral effects of testosterone, whereas treatment with antiestrogens or aromatase inhibitors block facilitation of copulatory behavior by testosterone. We used a highly sensitive in vitro radiometric assay to analyze the distribution and regulation of brain aromatase activity. Studies using micropunch dissections revealed that the highest levels of aromatase activity are found in an interconnected group of sexually dimorphic nuclei which constitutes a neural circuit important in the control of male sexual behavior. Androgen regulated aromatase activity in many diencephalic nucleic, including the medial preoptic nucleus, but not in the medial and cortical nuclei of the amygdala. Additional genetic evidence for both androgen-dependent and -independent control of brain AA was obtained by studies of androgen-insensitive testicular-feminized rats. These observations suggest that critical differences in enzyme responsiveness are present in different brain areas. Within several nuclei, sex differences in aromatase induction correlated with differences in nuclear androgen receptor concentrations suggesting that neural responsiveness to testosterone is sexually differentiated. Estradiol and dihydrotestosterone acted synergistically to regulate aromatase activity in the preoptic area. In addition, time-course studies showed that estrogen treatment increased the duration of nuclear androgen receptor occupation in the preoptic area of male rats treated with dihydrotestosterone. These results suggest possible ways that estrogens and androgens may interact at the cellular level to regulate neural function and behavior.  相似文献   

2.
We demonstrated previously that testosterone regulates aromatase activity in the anterior/dorsolateral hypothalamus of male rhesus macaques. To determine the level of the androgen effect, we developed a ribonuclease protection assay to study the effects of testosterone or dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on aromatase (P450(AROM)) mRNA in selected brain areas. Adult male rhesus monkeys were treated with testosterone or DHT. Steroids in serum were quantified by RIA. Fourteen brain regions were analyzed for P450(AROM) mRNA. Significant elevations of its message over controls (P<0.05) were found in the medial preoptic area/anterior hypothalamus of both androgen treatment groups and the medial basal hypothalamus of the testosterone-treated males. Other brain areas were not affected by androgen treatment. We conclude that testosterone and DHT regulate P450(AROM) mRNA in brain regions that mediate reproductive behaviors and gonadotropin release. The P450(AROM) mRNA of other brain areas is not androgen dependent. Brain-derived estrogens may also be important for maintaining neural circuitry in brain areas not related to reproduction. The control of P450(AROM) mRNA in these areas may differ from what we report here, but it is equally important to understand the function of in situ estrogen formation in these areas.  相似文献   

3.
Brain aromatase cytochrome P450 converts androgens to estrogens that play a critical role in the development of sexually dimorphic neural structures, the modulation of neuroendocrine function(s), and the regulation of sexual behavior. We characterized the influence of surgical castration on brain aromatase in Norway Brown and Wistar adult rats and compared their responses to Sprague-Dawley rats that were surgically or biochemically castrated (with flutamide, a known androgen receptor blocker). Aromata enzyme activity was measured by the tritiated water release assay in the medial basal hypothalmus/preoptic area (MBH/POA) and amygdala brain regions. The present results demonstrate that independent of the rat strain examined, MBH/POA aromatase is regulated by androgens (in Sprague-Dawley, Norway Brown and Wistar males). However, intact Wistar animals displayed significantly higher MBH/POA aromatase levels compared to Sprague-Dawley control values. Conversely, in the amygdala region, there was an apparent lack of androgen hormone action upon aromatase enzyme activity in some of the rat strains tested. The importance of brain aromatase regulating estrogen biosynthesis and influencing brain development and function is covered.  相似文献   

4.
Songbirds have a complex neural network for learning and production of song, namely the neural song system. Several nuclei of the song system contain androgen receptors (AR), and the neostriatal nucleus HVc also contains alpha type estrogen receptors (ER). Many songbird species show seasonal changes in both song and the neural song system that are correlated with seasonal variations in the circulating levels of gonadal steroids. However, there is increasing evidence that the sensitivity of the song system to gonadal steroids also changes seasonally. This could involve changes in the expression and activity of steroid receptors and steroid-metabolizing enzymes, such as the estrogen-synthesizing enzyme aromatase (AROM). The seasonal regulation of brain AR, ER, and AROM has not been studied before in the same individual songbirds. In this work, we compared plasma levels of androgens and estrogens, the expression level of AR-, ER-, and AROM-mRNA in the telencephalon, and brain AROM activity in male canaries between autumn (November) and spring (April) periods of high singing activity. Plasma levels of androgens and estrogens were higher in April than in November. The expression level of ER in HVc was higher in November than in April. In contrast, the expression level of AROM in the caudomedial neostriatum was higher in April than in November. However, we found no seasonal differences in the level of expression of AR and the volume of HVc as delimited by AR expression. Thus, AR expression in HVc was not correlated with circulating androgen levels. This study shows that both steroid-dependent and -independent seasonal factors regulate the action of gonadal hormones on the song system. In addition, we report a new site of AROM expression in the songbird brain, the nucleus interfacialis.  相似文献   

5.
6.
This study examines the effects of nonaromatizable androgens, methyltrienolone (R1881) and 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) on aggressive courtship and vocal behavior in the male ring dove. Since androgens may influence behavior by increasing the formation of estrogen in the brain, the effects of R1881 and DHT on brain aromatase activity were also studied using an in vitro microassay. Under conditions in which testosterone induced aggressive courtship patterns, the nonaromatizable androgens were ineffective. But DHT and R1881 induced vocal behavior with equal efficiency, indicating that androgens can influence mechanisms of vocal behavior without conversion to estrogens. The behavioral effectiveness of both hormones was reduced (approximately 50%) when the period between castration and treatment was doubled. Testosterone propionate increased formation of E2 from 3H-testosterone in both the preoptic (POA) and anterior hypothalamic areas. Neither of the nonaromatizable androgens affected POA aromatase activity. The results suggest that only the aromatizable androgen, testosterone, which is also required specifically for male courtship, increases preoptic formation of estrogen.  相似文献   

7.
Aromatase activity in adult guinea pig brain is androgen dependent   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Androgen metabolism in target tissues constitutes an important step for understanding hormone action. The in situ aromatization of androgen represents one of these metabolic events. We characterized aromatase activity (AA) in a microsomal preparation of brain tissue from adult guinea pigs since earlier reports questioned its presence in neural tissues of this species. Analyses revealed an apparent substrate affinity (approximately 17 nM) that was equivalent in adult males and females. However, adult male brains contained greater quantities of AA than female brains. Specifically, AA in the preoptic area (POA: p less than 0.05) and the medial basal hypothalamus (MBH; p less than 0.01) was greater in males than in females. AA was concentrated in the limbic system and hypothalamus (amygdala greater than POA greater than septum greater than MBH), whereas low levels were consistently measured in cortical tissue. In vitro estrogen formation was significantly lower in POA (p less than 0.05) and MBH (p less than 0.01) after castration. After dihydrotestosterone treatment, AA returned to levels equal to or greater than those observed in intact males. These data indicate that AA does exist in the guinea pig brain and is modulated by androgens through the androgen receptor. The presence of high levels of aromatase activity may suggest a role for locally formed estrogens in brain function in this species.  相似文献   

8.
In the peacock blenny Salaria pavo large males with well-developed secondary sexual characters establish nests and attract females while small “sneaker” males mimic female sexual displays in order to approach the nests of larger males and parasitically fertilize eggs. These alternative reproductive tactics are sequential, as sneakers irreversibly switch into nesting males. This transition involves major morphologic and behavioral changes and is likely to be mediated by hormones. This study focuses on the role of aromatase, an enzyme that catalyses the conversion of androgens into estrogens, in the regulation of male sexual polymorphism in S. pavo. For this, sex steroid plasma levels and aromatase activity (AA) in gonads, whole brain and brain macroareas were determined in sneakers, transitional males (i.e. sneakers undergoing the transition into nesting males), nesting males and females collected in the field. AA was much higher in ovarian tissue than in testicular tissue and accordingly circulating estradiol levels were highest in females. This supports the view that elevated AA and estradiol levels are associated with the development of a functional ovary. Transitional males are in a non-reproductive phase and had underdeveloped testes when compared with sneakers and nesting males. Testicular AA was approximately 10 times higher in transitional males when compared with sneakers and nesting males, suggesting high AA has a suppressive effect on testicular development. Nesting males had significantly higher plasma levels of both testosterone (T) and 11-ketotestosterone when compared with the other male morphs and previous studies demonstrated that these androgens suppress female-like displays in sneakers. In the brain, AA was highest in macroareas presumably containing hypothalamic nuclei traditionally associated with the regulation of reproductive behaviors. Overall, females presented the highest levels of brain AA. In male morphs AA increased from sneakers, to transitional males, to nesting males in all brain macroareas. These results suggest that the transition into the nesting male tactic is accompanied both by an increase in testicular androgen production and by a higher conversion of androgens into estrogens in the brain. The increase in androgen production is likely to mediate the development of male secondary sexual characters while the increase in brain AA may be related to the behavioral changes associated with tactic transition.  相似文献   

9.
Sexual hormones, estrogens and androgens, determine biological response in a tissue- and gender-specific manner and have a pivotal role in endocrine-mediated tumorigenesis. In situ estrogen production by aromatase is a critical determinant for breast cancer growth and progression. On the contrary, clinical and in vitro studies indicate that androgens have a protective role in mammary carcinogenesis. Here, we demonstrated, in hormone-dependent breast cancer cells, the existence of a functional interplay between the androgen receptor (AR), the orphan nuclear receptor DAX-1 and the aromatase enzyme involved in the inhibition of the estrogen-dependent breast cancer cell proliferation exerted by androgen signaling. Indeed, our results revealed, in MCF-7 cells, that ligand-activated AR induces the expression of the orphan nuclear receptor DAX-1 by direct binding to a newly identified androgen-response-element within the DAX-1 proximal promoter. In turn, androgen-induced DAX-1 is recruited, in association with the corepressor N-CoR, within the SF-1/LRH-1 containing region of the aromatase promoter, thereby repressing aromatase expression and activity. In elucidating a novel mechanism by which androgens, through DAX-1, inhibit aromatase expression in breast cancer cell lines, these findings reinforce the theory of androgen- opposing estrogen-action, opening new avenues for therapeutic intervention in estrogen-dependent breast tumors.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Many sex differences in the regulation of reproductive functionin rats are the result of a differentiation of the brain whichoccurs neonatally. Although injections of either androgens orestrogens are capable during the neonatal period of alteringhypothalamic systems involved in reproductive behavior and gonadotropinregulation, the physiological role of each type of hormone hasnot been clearly established. In both sexes, circulating estrogensare normally kept from interacting with estrogen receptors inthe limbic brain by the high levels of alpha-fetoprotein inthe blood. The local aromatization of androgens in the braincould circumvent alpha-fetoprotein, since androgens do not bindto this serum protein. The "paromatization hypothesis" statesthat testosterone, which is abundant in neonatal male circulationbut absent in females, is locally converted to estradiol inthe limbic brain. There it binds to estrogen receptor proteinsto produce tissue differentiation. The ontogeny of estradiolbinding proteins in limbic areas is consistent with the aromatizationhypothesis, with a rapid increase in receptor levels occurringshortly after birth. Also, the presence of endogenous estradiol-receptorcomplexes has been demonstrated in the cell nuclei of male neonatesbut not female neonales. Furthermore, the presence of estradiolbinding proteins in other regions of the neonatal male and femalebrain suggests an additional role of estradiol. unknown as ofyet. Several studies with agents which block the aromatizationof androgens to estrogens or the binding of estrogens to theirreceptors are consistent with the aromatization hypothesis,since these agents prevent the differentiation of intact neonatalmales. However, specific androgen binding proteins are alsopresent in neonatal brains, and androgen-receptor complexescan be found in cell nuclei of neonates after an injection oftritiated androgen. The possible involvement of these receptorsin sexual differentiation of the brain is suggested by the findingthat an antiandrogen inhibits both the binding of androgens(but not estrogens) and the differentiation of males.  相似文献   

12.
Expression of the enzyme aromatase, which converts androgens to estrogens, is known to be regulated by gonadal steroids in brain areas linked to reproduction and related behaviors in several groups of vertebrates. Previously, we demonstrated in a vocal fish, the plainfin midshipman, that both males and females undergo seasonal changes in brain aromatase mRNA expression in the preoptic area (POA) and the dimorphic sonic/vocal motor nucleus (SMN) that parallel seasonal variation in circulating steroid levels and reproductive behavior. We tested the hypothesis that steroids are directly responsible for seasonal modulation of aromatase in females because they show the most dramatic fluctuations of testosterone (T) and 17beta-estradiol (E2) throughout the year. Adult female midshipmen were ovariectomized and administered T, E2, or blank (control) implants. We then quantified aromatase mRNA expression within the POA and SMN by in situ hybridization. Both T- and E2-treated females had elevated mRNA expression levels in both brain areas compared to controls. T affected aromatase expression in a level-dependent manner, whereas E2 showed a decreased effect at higher circulating levels. This study demonstrates that seasonal differences in brain aromatase expression in female midshipman fish may be explained, in part, by changes in levels of circulating steroids.  相似文献   

13.
Accumulating evidence indicate that structural synaptic plasticity in limbic areas plays a vital role not only in normal brain functions, such as cognition and mood, but also in the development of neurological and mental disorders. We have learned from studies investigating neuronal remodeling that estrogens have an exceptional synaptogenic potential that seems to be specific to limbic areas of the adult female brain. On the other hand, structural synaptic plasticity in the adult male brain and the synaptogenic effect of androgens received relatively little attention. During the last five years, the Leranth laboratory provided conclusive evidence that the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex of adult male rodents and non-human primates retain considerable structural synaptic plasticity similar to the female, and that androgens are capable of inducing spine synapse growth in both the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex similar to estrogens. Our recent work also demonstrates that androgen-induced remodeling of spine synapses in the prefrontal cortex of adult male rats is dependent, at least to some extent, on functional androgen receptors, while being entirely independent of the androgen receptor in the hippocampus. Based on these findings and on their many beneficial effects, we believe that androgens hold a great and undeservingly neglected therapeutic potential that could be employed to reverse synaptic pathology in various neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric disorders.  相似文献   

14.
Recently, increasing importance has been attached to the role of estrogens and their receptors in male reproduction, since they have been found to be abundant in the male reproductive tract. In the lizard, Podarcis sicula, a seasonal breeder, estrogens seem to be involved in the regulation of testicular activity. Particularly, it has been hypothesized that the block of spermatogenesis and the complete regression of the epididymis and other secondary sexual characters (SSCs) in autumn might be due to high estrogen levels. To investigate the role of estrogens in the reproductive process of male lizards, we utilized Fadrozole ((AI) [4-(5,6,7,8-tetrahydroimidazole [1,5-a] pyridin-5-yl)-benzonitrile monohydrochloride] (CGS 16949A)), a nonsteroidal inhibitor of aromatase, the enzyme involved in the aromatization of androgens to estrogens, evaluating its effects on plasma sex-hormone release, spermatogenesis and epididymis morphology. For this purpose, adult male lizards, captured during the autumnal recrudescence, were intraperitoneally injected with 0.5 microg and 5 microg/g/body weight of AI for 15 and 30 days. In the animals treated with the higher AI dose, estrogen levels decreased if compared to the control groups, whereas androgen levels increased. Furthermore, histologic sections of testes and epididymes showed that the 30-day treatment with AI-induced spermatogenesis resumption with release of sperms into the large lumen of the seminiferous tubules, and the epididymes appeared more developed with moderately secreting columnar canal cells. Therefore, it is proposed that failure of spermatogenesis in autumn might be due to high estrogen levels.  相似文献   

15.
We studied the ability of neural tissues from fetal rhesus macaques to aromatize androgens to estrogens and assessed whether androgens are involved in the regulation of aromatase activity during development. Fetuses of both sexes, obtained on approximately Day 100 of gestation, were gonadectomized and immediately given intraabdominal Silastic capsules containing dihydrotestosterone. Sham-gonadectomized (intact) and gonadectomized, sham-implanted groups were also studied. Three weeks after the initial operation, the fetuses were delivered by cesarean section. To examine the developmental pattern of aromatase activity in the brain, fetuses were also delivered at two earlier times in gestation (at approximately 50 days and approximately 80 days). Whole-homogenates of preoptic area plus anterior hypothalamus (POA), hypothalamus (HT), amygdala (AMYG), and cerebral cortex (CTX) were incubated for 1 h in a phosphate buffer with saturating concentrations of [1 beta-3H] androstenedione. The amount of 3H2O formed was used as an index to estimate aromatase activity. The aromatase reaction exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics with an apparent Km of approximately 0.03 microM in all tissues from 120-day-old fetuses. Activity measured with the 3H2O assay closely corresponded with levels determined by product isolation. The highest levels of aromatase activity were found in the POA. Neither gonadectomy nor treatment with androgen affected aromatase in fetal tissue; activities in males were significantly greater than in females for the AMYG and CTX, but not for the POA or HT. The levels of aromatase activity detected in the HT and CTX of both sexes on Days 50 and 80 of gestation were at least ten times greater than the levels measured in adults.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Testosterone at physiological levels cannot exert negative feedback action on LH secretion in long-term castrated male monkeys. The cellular basis of this refractoriness is unknown. To study it, we compared two groups of male rhesus macaques: one group (group 1, n = 4) was castrated and immediately treated with testosterone for 30 days; the second group (group 2, n = 4) was castrated and treated with testosterone for 9 days beginning 21 days after castration. Feedback control of LH by testosterone in group 1 was normal, whereas insensitivity to its action was found in group 2. Using the endpoints of concentrations of aromatase activity (P450(AROM) messenger RNA [mRNA]) and androgen receptor mRNA in the medial preoptic anterior hypothalamus and in the medial basal hypothalamus, we found that aromatase activity in both of these tissues was significantly lower, P: < 0.01, in group 2 compared with group 1 males. P450(AROM) mRNA and androgen receptor mRNA did not differ, however. Our data suggest that the cellular basis of testosterone insensitivity after long-term castration may reside in the reduced capacity of specific brain areas to aromatize testosterone. Because P450(AROM) mRNA did not change in group 2 males, we hypothesize that an estrogen-dependent neural deficit, not involving the regulation of the P450(AROM) mRNA, occurs in long-term castrated monkeys.  相似文献   

17.
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19.
The enzyme aromatase (also called estrogen synthase) that catalyzes the transformation of testosterone (T) into estradiol plays a key limiting role in the action of T on many aspects of reproduction. The distribution and regulation of aromatase in the quail brain has been studied by radioenzyme assays on microdissected brain areas, immunocytochemistry, RT-PCR and in situ hybridization. High levels of aromatase activity (AA) characterize the sexually dimorphic, steroid-sensitive medial preoptic nucleus (POM), a critical site of T action and aromatization for the activation of male sexual behavior. The boundaries of the POM are clearly outlined by a dense population of aromatase-containing cells as visualized by both immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization histochemistry. Aromatase synthesis in the POM is controlled by T and its metabolite estradiol, but estradiol receptors alpha (ER) are not normally co-localized with aromatase in this brain area. Estradiol receptor beta (ERβ) has been recently cloned in quail and localized in POM but we do not yet know whether ERβ occurs in aromatase cells. It is therefore not known whether estrogens regulate aromatase synthesis directly or by affecting different inputs to aromatase cells as is the case with the gonadotropin releasing hormone neurons. The presence of aromatase in presynaptic boutons suggests that locally formed estrogens may exert part of their effects by non-genomic mechanisms at the membrane level. Rapid effects of estrogens in the brain that presumably take place at the neuronal membrane level have been described in other species. If fast transduction mechanisms for estrogen are available at the membrane level, this will not necessarily result in rapid changes in brain function if the availability of the ligand does not also change rapidly. We demonstrate here that AA in hypothalamic homogenates is rapidly down-regulated by exposure to conditions that enhance protein phosphorylation (addition of Ca2+, Mg2+, ATP). This inhibition is blocked by kinase inhibitors which supports the notion that phosphorylation processes are involved. A rapid (within minutes) and reversible regulation of AA is also observed in hypothalamic explants incubated in vitro and exposed to high Ca2+ levels (K+-induced depolarization, treatment by thapsigargin, by kainate, AMPA or NMDA). The local production and availability of estrogens in the brain can therefore be rapidly changed by Ca2+ based on variation in neurotransmitter activity. Locally-produced estrogens are as a consequence available for non-genomic regulation of neuronal physiology in a manner more akin to the action of a neuropeptide/neurotransmitter than previously thought.  相似文献   

20.
Estrogens produced within breast tumors may play a pivotal role in growth stimulation of the breast cancer cells. However, it is elusive whether the epithelial breast cancer cells themselves synthesize estrogens, or whether the surrounding tumor stromal cells synthesize and supply the cancer cells with estrogen. The aromatase enzyme catalyzes the estrogen production, aromatizing circulating androgens into estrogens. The aim of this study was to investigate aromatase expression and function in a model system of human breast cancer, using the estrogen responsive human MCF-7 breast cancer cell line. Cells were cultured in a low estrogen milieu and treated with estrogens, aromatizable androgens or non-aromatizable androgens. Cell proliferation, expression of estrogen-regulated proteins and aromatase activity were investigated. The MCF-7 cell line was observed to express sufficient aromatase enzyme activity in order to aromatize the androgen testosterone, resulting in a significant cell growth stimulation. The testosterone-mediated growth effect was completely inhibited by the aromatase inhibitors letrozole and 4-hydroxy-androstenedione. Expression studies of estrogen-regulated proteins confirmed that testosterone was aromatized to estrogen in the MCF-7 cells. Thus, the results indicate that epithelial breast cancer cells possess the ability to aromatize circulating androgens to estrogens.  相似文献   

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