| Literature DB >> 33193108 |
Janine L Dovey1, Nandini Vasudevan1.
Abstract
Estrogens are critical in driving sex-typical social behaviours that are ethologically relevant in mammals. This is due to both production of local estrogens and signaling by these ligands, particularly in an interconnected set of nuclei called the social behavioural network (SBN). The SBN is a sexually dimorphic network studied predominantly in rodents that is thought to underlie the display of social behaviour in mammals. Signalling by the predominant endogenous estrogen, 17β-estradiol, can be either via the classical genomic or non-classical rapid pathway. In the classical genomic pathway, 17β-estradiol binds the intracellular estrogen receptors (ER) α and β which act as ligand-dependent transcription factors to regulate transcription. In the non-genomic pathway, 17β-estradiol binds a putative plasma membrane ER (mER) such as GPR30/GPER1 to rapidly signal via kinases or calcium flux. Though GPER1's role in sexual dimorphism has been explored to a greater extent in cardiovascular physiology, less is known about its role in the brain. In the last decade, activation of GPER1 has been shown to be important for lordosis and social cognition in females. In this review we will focus on several mechanisms that may contribute to sexually dimorphic behaviors including the colocalization of these estrogen receptors in the SBN, interplay between the signaling pathways activated by these different estrogen receptors, and the role of these receptors in development and the maintenance of the SBN, all of which remain underexplored.Entities:
Keywords: aromatase; behavior; estrogen receptor isoforms; mood; neuroestrogens; sex differences in brain; social behavior network
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193108 PMCID: PMC7661790 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.595895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Organizational-activational hypothesis. (A) The testes are active during perinatal development providing testosterone for central aromatase (Aro) to produce estrogen (E) within the brain. Estrogen organizes the brain by binding to ERs, leading to the masculinization and defeminization of the brain. By contrast, the perinatal ovary is quiescent. In utero, the brain is protected from estrogens that may enter via maternal circulation by the presence of α-fetoprotein that binds estrogen. The role of the GPER1 in this organizational period is largely unknown. For a detailed review, the reader is referred to (8) and references therein. (B) The organized neural substrate is activated following puberty when the gonads become active. Estrogen is released from the ovaries and testosterone (T) from the testes, which is then aromatized to estrogen in the brain. The availability of cholesterol (Ch) and presence of steroidogenic enzymes within the brain also allows for the de novo production of neuroestrogens. Estrogens activate neural circuits to express behaviors through activating second messenger pathways such as MAPK acutely and recruiting transcriptional coactivators such as fos and jun to regulate non-ERE containing promoters. This could be via multiple ERs, including GPER1 (9). Alternatively, the classical nuclear hormone receptors, ERα/β can translocate to the nucleus to directly bind estrogen-response-elements in DNA to regulate gene transcription. Both these pathways result in modulation of behaviors in both males and females.
Sexual dimorphisms in central ER and aromatase expression across development.
| Area | ERα | ERβ | GPER1 | Aromatase | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pn | Pb | A | Pn | Pb | A | Pn | Pb | A | Pn | Pb | A | |
|
| ||||||||||||
| ARH | = 7,8 | = 7 | X 3 | = 3 | = 13 | = 11 | ||||||
| VMH | = 7,8 | F 7 | F 6 | = 6 | =* 12 | = 13 | =* 4 | |||||
| PVH | = 7 | =* 12 | = 11 | |||||||||
| LS | = 7 | = 7 | = 13 | |||||||||
| AVPV | F 1,9 | F 9 | X 1 | X 10 | = 13 | |||||||
| mPOA | = 7,8 | F 7,8 | = 3 | F 3 | M* 12 | = 13 | X* 4 | M 2,11 | ||||
|
| ||||||||||||
| BNST | F 1,9 | = 7,9 | F 9 | = 1 | M* 12 | = 13 | = 1 M* 4 | M 2 | ||||
| MeA | = 7 | F* 12 | = 13 | =* 4 | M 2 | |||||||
|
| M 5 | M 5 | ||||||||||
Relative expression of receptors and aromatase during perinatal (Pn), pubertal (Pb), and adult (A) periods. “F” denotes a greater expression in females, “M” a greater expression in males, “=“ an equal expression between males and females, and “X” indicates undetectable expression. All referenced research uses mouse or rat (*) models, apart from one study which used zebra finches to study GPER1 expression in song areas. References 1–5 measured mRNA expression; references 7–12 measured protein expression; reference 6 measured both mRNA and protein. 1. (24). 2. (25). 3. (26). 4. (27). 5. (28). 6. (29). 7. (30). 8. (31). 9. (32). 10. (33). 11. (34). 12. (35). 13. (36).