Review for "Morphological and Functional Evidence for Sexual Dimorphism in Neurokinin B Signaling in the Retrochiasmatic Area of Sheep"

2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin A. Lopez ◽  
Elizabeth C. Bowdridge ◽  
Richard B. McCosh ◽  
Michelle N. Bedenbaugh ◽  
Ashley N. Lindo ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin A. Lopez ◽  
Elizabeth C. Bowdridge ◽  
Richard B. McCosh ◽  
Michelle N. Bedenbaugh ◽  
Ashley N. Lindo ◽  
...  

Endocrinology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 160 (12) ◽  
pp. 2990-3000 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L Goodman ◽  
Wen He ◽  
Justin A Lopez ◽  
Michelle N Bedenbaugh ◽  
Richard B McCosh ◽  
...  

Abstract Recent evidence has implicated neurokinin B (NKB) signaling in the retrochiasmatic area (RCh) of the ewe in the LH surge. To test this hypothesis, we first lesioned NK3R neurons in this area by using a saporin conjugate (NK3-SAP). Three weeks after bilateral injection of NK3-SAP or a blank control (BLK-SAP) into the RCh, an LH surge was induced by using an artificial follicular-phase model in ovariectomized ewes. NK3-SAP lesioned approximately 88% of RCh NK3R-containing neurons and reduced the amplitude of the estrogen-induced LH surge by 58%, an inhibition similar to that seen previously with intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of a KISS1R antagonist (p271). We next tested the hypothesis that NKB signaling in the RCh acts via kisspeptin by determining whether the combined effects of NK3R-SAP lesions and icv infusion of p271 were additive. Experiment 1 was replicated except that ewes received two sequential artificial follicular phases with infusions of p271 or vehicle using a crossover design. The combination of the two treatments decreased the peak of the LH surge by 59%, which was similar to that seen with NK3-SAP (52%) or p271 (54%) alone. In contrast, p271 infusion delayed the onset and peak of the LH surge in both NK3-SAP– and BLK-SAP–injected ewes. Based on these data, we propose that NKB signaling in the RCh increases kisspeptin levels critical for the full amplitude of the LH surge in the ewe but that kisspeptin release occurs independently of RCh input at the onset of the surge to initiate GnRH secretion.


Endocrinology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 153 (10) ◽  
pp. 4818-4829 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Ruiz-Pino ◽  
V. M. Navarro ◽  
A. H. Bentsen ◽  
D. Garcia-Galiano ◽  
M. A. Sanchez-Garrido ◽  
...  

Abstract Neurokinin B (NKB), encoded by Tac2 in rodents, and its receptor, NK3R, have recently emerged as important regulators of reproduction; NKB has been proposed to stimulate kisspeptin output onto GnRH neurons. Accordingly, NKB has been shown to induce gonadotropin release in several species; yet, null or even inhibitory effects of NKB have been also reported. The basis for these discrepant findings, as well as other key aspects of NKB function, remains unknown. We report here that in the rat, LH responses to the NK3R agonist, senktide, display a salient sexual dimorphism, with persistent stimulation in females, regardless of the stage of postnatal development, and lack of LH responses in males from puberty onward. Such dimorphism was independent of the predominant sex steroid after puberty, because testosterone administration to adult females failed to prevent LH responses to senktide, and LH responsiveness was not restored in adult males treated with estradiol or the nonaromatizable androgen, dihydrotestosterone. Yet, removal of sex steroids by gonadectomy switched senktide effects to inhibitory, both in adult male and female rats. Sexual dimorphism was also evident in the numbers of NKB-positive neurons in the arcuate nucleus (ARC), which were higher in adult female rats. This is likely the result of differences in sex steroid milieu during early periods of brain differentiation, because neonatal exposures to high doses of estrogen decreased ARC NKB neurons at later developmental stages. Likewise, neonatal estrogenization resulted in lower serum LH levels that were normalized by senktide administration. Finally, we document that the ability of estrogen to inhibit hypothalamic Tac2 expression seems region specific, because estrogen administration decreased Tac2 levels in the ARC but increased them in the lateral hypothalamus. Altogether, our data provide a deeper insight into relevant aspects of NKB function as major regulator of the gonadotropic axis in the rat, including maturational changes, sexual dimorphism, and differential regulation by sex steroids.


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