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Critical Periods of Sensitivity of Sexually Dimorphic Spinal Nuclei to Prenatal Testosterone Exposure in Female Rats
Authors:O. Byron Ward   Ann M. Wexler   Joseph R. Carlucci   Mark A. Eckert  Ingeborg L. Ward
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania, 19085
Abstract:Male rats normally have more neurons than do females in two nuclei of the lumbar spinal cord, the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) and the dorsolateral nucleus (DLN). Female rats exposed to testosterone propionate (TP) on the 2 days of gestation (Days 18 and 19) when males normally experience a surge in plasma testosterone showed a maximal increase in both SNB and DLN neuronal number. TP exposure just prior to, or following, Days 18 and 19 led to smaller increments. Administration of a small (5 μg) dose of TP after birth, while having no effect by itself, synergized with prenatal TP to enhance the number of SNB neurons. DLN neurons were less responsive to postnatal TP. The somal and nuclear size of SNB, but not DLN, neurons was increased by perinatal TP. Paradoxically, the number of DLN neurons with large somas (1358 μm2or larger) was reduced by perinatal TP, a finding congruent with a previous report that females and feminized males have more of these large DLN neurons than control males. Our data suggest an exquisite sensitivity of the developing spinal nuclei to the timing of hormonal surges normally found in fetal males. Exposure to androgens during a brief prenatal period is needed to assure responsiveness to the low amounts of androgen circulating during neonatal ontogeny, when the process of sexual differentiation is completed.
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