4.5 Article

Roles of estrogen receptor α and androgen receptor in the regulation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 453, Issue 4, Pages 336-344

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/cne.10413

Keywords

estrogen receptor beta; sexual behavior; dopamine; knockout mouse; testicular feminization mutant

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH57759, K02 MH01349] Funding Source: Medline

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In brain and peripheral tissues, steroid hormones regulate nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). We asked whether estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) and/or androgen receptor (AR) regulated nNOS immunoreactivity in mouse brain. First, we quantified cells singly labeled for nNOS immunoreactivity or labeled dually with ERalpha-immunoreactive (-ir) or AR-ir cells in the nucleus accumbens (Acb), preoptic area (POA), bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), posterior dorsal and posterior ventral regions of the medial amygdala (MePD and MePV, respectively), and paraventricular nucleus (PVN). The POA and MePD contained the greatest number of double-labeled cells. More nNOS-it cells were colabeled with ERalpha immunoreactivity compared with AR immunoreactivity. Next, by using a double mutant mouse in which males lacked functional ERalpha, AR, or both, we investigated. the roles of these steroid receptors in nNOS-ir cell numbers and immunoreactive area staining under testosterone (T) and estradiol (E2) conditions. Our data show that functional ERalpha is correlated with more nNOS-ir cells under T conditions and more immunoreactive area staining in the POA under both T and E2 conditions. However, ERalpha decreases nNOS-ir cell number in the BNST under E2 treatment. In summary, the data suggest that AR has organizational actions on nNOS-ir cell numbers in the MePV, that interactions between ERalpha and AR genes occur in PVN, and that sex differences in nNOS-it area staining are limited to the POA. Thus, we show that ERalpha and AR interact to regulate nNOS in male and female brain in a site-specific manner.

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