Literature DB >> 29534195

Effects of Sex Steroids on the Spinal Gastrin-Releasing Peptide System Controlling Male Sexual Function in Rats.

Takumi Oti1, Keiko Takanami1,2, Saya Ito3, Takashi Ueda3, Ken Ichi Matsuda2, Mitsuhiro Kawata2,4, Jintetsu Soh3, Osamu Ukimura3, Tatsuya Sakamoto1, Hirotaka Sakamoto1.   

Abstract

The gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) system in the lumbosacral spinal cord controls male sexual function in rats. In contrast, in female rats, GRP neurons could scarcely be detected around puberty when circulating ovarian steroid hormones such as estradiol and progesterone levels are increasing. However, little information is available on feminizing or demasculinizing effects of ovarian steroids on the central nervous system in female puberty and adulthood. In this study, to visualize the spinal GRP neurons in vivo, we generated a GRP-promoter-Venus transgenic (Tg) rat line and studied the effects of the sex steroid hormones on GRP expression in the rat lumbar cord by examining the Venus fluorescence. In these Tg rats, the sexually dimorphic spinal GRP neurons controlling male sexual function were clearly labeled with Venus fluorescence. As expected, Venus fluorescence in the male lumbar cord was markedly decreased after castration and restored by chronic androgen replacement. Furthermore, androgen-induced Venus expression in the spinal cord of adult Tg males was significantly attenuated by chronic treatment with progesterone but not with estradiol. A luciferase assay using a human GRP-promoter construct showed that androgens enhance the spinal GRP system, and more strikingly, that progesterone acts to inhibit the GRP system via an androgen receptor-mediated mechanism. These results demonstrate that circulating androgens may play an important role in the spinal GRP system controlling male sexual function not only in rats but also in humans and that progesterone could be an important feminizing factor in the spinal GRP system in females during pubertal development.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29534195     DOI: 10.1210/en.2018-00043

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Endocrinology        ISSN: 0013-7227            Impact factor:   4.736


  2 in total

1.  Vasopressin-oxytocin-type signaling is ancient and has a conserved water homeostasis role in euryhaline marine planarians.

Authors:  Aoshi Kobayashi; Mayuko Hamada; Masa-Aki Yoshida; Yasuhisa Kobayashi; Naoaki Tsutsui; Toshio Sekiguchi; Yuta Matsukawa; Sho Maejima; Joseph J Gingell; Shoko Sekiguchi; Ayumu Hamamoto; Debbie L Hay; John F Morris; Tatsuya Sakamoto; Hirotaka Sakamoto
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-03-04       Impact factor: 14.136

2.  Oxytocin Influences Male Sexual Activity via Non-synaptic Axonal Release in the Spinal Cord.

Authors:  Takumi Oti; Keita Satoh; Daisuke Uta; Junta Nagafuchi; Sayaka Tateishi; Ryota Ueda; Keiko Takanami; Larry J Young; Antony Galione; John F Morris; Tatsuya Sakamoto; Hirotaka Sakamoto
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2020-10-29       Impact factor: 10.834

  2 in total

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