1. Estrogen receptor-α immunoreactive neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord of the female rhesus monkey: Species-specific characteristics
- Author
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Veronique G.J.M. VanderHorst, Henry J. Ralston, and Ei Terasawa
- Subjects
Ovariectomy ,Guinea Pigs ,MONOSYNAPTIC PROJECTIONS ,sensory ,Biology ,primate ,IMMUNOCYTOCHEMICAL LOCALIZATION ,Article ,reproduction ,sex steroid ,Mice ,Species Specificity ,Cricetinae ,NUCLEUS RETROAMBIGUUS ,Tegmentum ,medicine ,Animals ,TYROSINE-HYDROXYLASE ,CONCENTRATING CELLS ,pain ,MIDBRAIN PERIAQUEDUCTAL GRAY ,Lateral parabrachial nucleus ,Pretectal area ,Neurons ,SEXUAL-BEHAVIOR ,Brain Mapping ,Sheep ,MEDULLA-OBLONGATA ,autonomic ,General Neuroscience ,CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEM ,Spinal trigeminal nucleus ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Anatomy ,Spinal cord ,Macaca mulatta ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Spinal Cord ,nervous system ,Cats ,Medulla oblongata ,Female ,Neuron ,Brainstem ,MESSENGER-RNA ,Neuroscience ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Brain Stem - Abstract
The distribution pattern of estrogen receptors in the rodent CNS has been reported extensively, but mapping of estrogen receptors in primates is incomplete. In this study we describe the distribution of estrogen receptor alpha immunoreactive (ER-alpha 1R) neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord of the rhesus monkey.In the midbrain, ER-alpha IR neurons were located in the periaqueductal gray, especially the caudal ventrolateral part, the adjacent tegmentum, peripeduncular nucleus, and pretectal nucleus. A few ER-alpha IR neurons were found in the lateral parabrachial nucleus, lateral pontine tegmentum, and pontine gray medial to the locus coeruleus. At caudal medullary levels, ER-alpha IR neurons were present in the commissural nucleus of the solitary complex and the caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus. The remaining regions of the brainstem were devoid of ER-alpha IR neurons. Spinal ER-alpha IR neurons were found in laminae I-V, and area X, and were most numerous in lower lumbar and sacral segments. The lateral collateral pathway and dorsal commissural nuclei of the sacral cord and the thoracic intermediolateral cell column also contained ER-a IR neurons. Estrogen treatment did not result in any differences in the distribution pattern of ER-alpha IR neurons.The results indicate that ER-alpha IR neurons in the primate brainstem and spinal cord are concentrated mainly in regions involved in sensory and autonomic processing. Compared with rodent species, the regional distribution of ER-alpha IR neurons is less widespread, and ER-a IR neurons in regions such as the spinal dorsal horn and caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus appear to be less abundant. These distinctions suggest a modest role of ER-a in estrogen-mediated actions on primate brainstem and spinal systems. These differences may contribute to variations in behavioral effects of estrogen between primate and rodent species. (c) 2009 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2009
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