| Literature DB >> 18418663 |
Hirotaka Sakamoto1, Kazuyoshi Ukena, Mitsuhiro Kawata, Kazuyoshi Tsutsui.
Abstract
Neurosteroids are now known to be steroids that are synthesized de novo from cholesterol in the central and peripheral nervous systems of vertebrates through mechanisms at least partly independent of peripheral steroidogenic glands, such as the adrenal and gonads. A series of our studies have demonstrated that the rat Purkinje cell, a cerebellar neuron, actively produces progesterone de novo from cholesterol only during neonatal life and progesterone promotes dendritic growth, spinogenesis and synaptogenesis via its nuclear receptor in this neuron. Thus the Purkinje cell serves as an excellent cellular model for understanding the formation of cerebellar neuronal circuit in relation to genomic neurosteroid actions. Recently, we have further found that Purkinje cells express the putative membrane progesterone receptor, 25-Dx in rats. By immunocytochemistry, the expression of 25-Dx was localized in the Purkinje cell and external granule cell layer. RT-PCR and Western immunoblot analyses revealed the expressions of 25-Dx and its mRNA in the rat cerebellum, which increased during neonatal life. Therefore, progesterone would promote dendritic growth, spinogenesis and synaptogenesis via 25-Dx as well as its nuclear receptor in the Purkinje cell in the neonate. Because the subcellular localization of 25-Dx was associated with membrane structures of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi, 25-Dx may also play a role in the regulation of neurosteroidogenesis in the developing Purkinje cell. Here we summarize the advances made in our understanding of the expression, localization and its possible actions of 25-Dx in the developing Purkinje cell.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18418663 DOI: 10.1007/s12311-008-0007-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum ISSN: 1473-4222 Impact factor: 3.847