Gonadal Steroids Promote Glial Differentiation and Alter Neuronal Morphology in the Developing Hypothalamus in a Regionally Specific Manner
Open Access
- 15 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 19 (4) , 1464-1472
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.19-04-01464.1999
Abstract
One of the more striking sexual dimorphisms in the adult brain is the synaptic patterning in some hypothalamic nuclei. In the arcuate nucleus (ARC) males have twice the number of axosomatic and one-half the number of axodendritic spine synapses as females. The opposite pattern is observed in the immediately adjacent ventromedial nucleus (VMN). In both cases, early exposure to testosterone dictates adult dimorphism, but the exact timing, mechanism, and site of steroid action remain unknown. Astrocytes also exhibit sexual dimorphisms, and their role in mediating neuronal morphology is becoming increasingly evident. Using Golgi-Cox impregnation to examine neuronal morphology and glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity (GFAP-IR) to characterize astrocytic morphology, we compared structural differences in dendrites and astrocytes from the ARC and VMN in postnatal day 2 rat pups from four hormonally different groups. Consistent with previous observations, testosterone exposure induced a rapid and dramatic stellation response in ARC astrocytes. Coincident with this change in astrocytic morphology was a 37% reduction in the density of dendritic spines on ARC neurons. In contrast, astrocytes in the VMN were poorly differentiated and did not respond to testosterone exposure, nor were there any changes in neuronal dendrite spine density. However, VMN neurons exposed to testosterone had almost double the number of branches compared with that in controls. These data suggest that the degree of maturation and the differentiation of hypothalamic astrocytesin vivo are correlated with the ability of neurons to sprout branches or spines in response to steroid hormones and may underlie regionally specific differences in synaptic patterning.Keywords
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