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Brain masculinization requires androgen receptor function

Authors :
Takashi Sato
Keisuke Sekine
Takashi Nakamura
Shigeaki Kato
Hirotaka Kawano
Pierre Chambon
Takashi Yamada
Yuko Nakamichi
Daniel Metzger
Ken-ichi Aihara
Andrée Krust
Toru Fukuda
Yoshikatsu Uematsu
Takahiro Matsumoto
Kimihiro Yoshimura
Yoko Yamamoto
Tomoyuki Watanabe
Tatsuya Yoshizawa
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2004.

Abstract

Testicular testosterone produced during a critical perinatal period is thought to masculinize and defeminize the male brain from the inherent feminization program and induce male-typical behaviors in the adult. These actions of testosterone appear to be exerted not through its androgenic activity, but rather through its conversion by brain aromatase into estrogen, with the consequent activation of estrogen receptor (ER)-mediated signaling. Thus, the role of androgen receptor (AR) in perinatal brain masculinization underlying the expression of male-typical behaviors remains unclear because of the conversion of testosterone into estrogen in the brain. Here, we report a null AR mutation in mice generated by the Cre-loxP system. The AR-null mutation in males ( AR L-/Y ) resulted in the ablation of male-typical sexual and aggressive behaviors, whereas female AR-null homozygote ( AR L-/L- ) mice exhibited normal female sexual behaviors. Treatment with nonaromatizable androgen (5α-dihydrotestosterone, DHT) was ineffective in restoring the impaired male sexual behaviors, but it partially rescued impaired male aggressive behaviors in AR L-/Y mice. Impaired male-typical behaviors in ER α -/- mice were restored on DHT treatment. The role of AR function in brain masculinization at a limited perinatal stage was studied in AR L-/L- mice. Perinatal DHT treatment of females led to adult females sensitive to both 17β-estradiol and DHT in the induction of male-typical behaviors. However, this female brain masculinization was abolished by AR inactivation. Our results suggested that perinatal brain masculinization requires AR function and that expression of male-typical behaviors in adults is mediated by both AR-dependent and -independent androgen signaling.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7147e557079ab99c60ef8de90bd0e691