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Adult plasticity in hormone-sensitive motoneuron morphology: methodological/behavioral confounds
Authors:Raouf S  Van Roo B  Sengelaub D
Institution:Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405, USA.
Abstract:Changes in androgen levels can alter the structure of motoneurons in the spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB), a motor nucleus that innervates perineal muscles involved in copulatory behavior. While sexual activity can alter androgen levels in normal males, it has no effect on SNB motoneuron soma size or dendritic morphology (Beversdorf, Kurz, and Sengelaub, 1990). However, Breedlove (1997) reported reductions in the size of SNB somata, nuclei, and target muscles of copulating versus noncopulating castrated rats maintained on subphysiological testosterone. To reconcile the results obtained using intact versus implant paradigms, we tested the hypothesis that the implant/behavior paradigm could produce differences in hormone levels, potentially confounding sexual behavior effects on the morphology of this androgen-sensitive neuromuscular system. Young adult male rats were castrated and immediately given 5-mm Silastic implants containing crystalline testosterone. One week later, blood samples were drawn and the males were housed with receptive females (copulators) or nonreceptive females (noncopulators) or housed alone (singles). After 27 days, blood samples were drawn again, and SNB target muscles and spinal cords removed. No differences in target muscle weight or SNB somata and nuclei size were observed between copulators, noncopulators, or singles; as expected, all measures were significantly reduced relative to intact males. Radioimmunoassay showed that testosterone declined differentially over the course of the behavioral manipulation across groups, being greatest in copulators and least pronounced in single males. These data indicate that differences in sexual or housing experience can alter testosterone titers under these implant conditions, potentially confounding hormone-sensitive measures of morphology.
Keywords:hormone implants  motoneuron morphology  copulatory behavior
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