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Catecholamines in steroid-dependent brain development
Authors:Alexander G Reznikov  Nadezhda D Nosenko
Institution:

Institute of Endocrinology and Metabolism, 254114, Kiev, Ukraine

Abstract:Sex-specific peculiarities of catecholamine (CA) content and turnover in neuroendocrine brain areas and their modification with neonatal steroids or prenatal stress (PS) in Wistar rats were studied. No changes in noradrenaline (NA) content and turnover rate were found in the preoptic area (POA), meanwhile dopamine (DA) turnover rates in the POA and mediobasal hypothalamus (MBH) were increased in neonatally androgenized 10-day-old females. Treatment of female neonates with various catecholestrogens increased hypothalamic NA content by 30–95% but only 4-hydroxyestradiol-17β induced anovulation. 6-Hydroxydopamine had no significant impact on hypothalamic CA content in neonates and did not prevent testosterone-induced persistent estrous. Maternal stress (restriction for 1 h a day, 15–21st days of pregnancy) resulted in a decrease of hypothalamic NA and blood plasma corticosterone response to acute stress in adult male offspring. Sex differences in CA content in the POA and MBH disappeared in 10-day-old prenatally stressed rats. Conclusions: (1) sexual brain differentiation needs co-operative actions of sex steroids and CA to be completed; and (2) early changes in CA content and turnover induced by PS or neonatal steroid exposure predetermine long-term alterations of the stress responsiveness, reproductive behaviour and neuroendocrine control of ovulation.
Keywords:
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