Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 7, 2688-2696, Copyright © 1987 by Society for Neuroscience
Medial preoptic sexual dimorphisms in the guinea pig. I. An investigation of their hormonal dependence
W Byne and R Bleier
The guinea pig exhibits sexually dimorphic patterns of cell density and
distribution throughout the medial preoptic area, a region that has been
shown to be involved in the regulation of sexually differentiated
behavioral and endocrinological reproductive functions (Bleier et al.,
1982). The most prominent sex differences involve 2 components of the
medial preoptic nucleus (MPN), an anteriorly placed compact subnucleus
(MPNa) that is twice as large in females as in males, and a centrally
placed compact subnucleus that occupies an approximately 10-fold greater
volume in males than in females and corresponds to the sexually dimorphic
nucleus described in the rat by Gorski et al. (1978). In the present study
the sex differences in both of these cell groups were shown to be
unaffected by neonatal gonadectomy and postnatal hormonal manipulations. In
contrast, MPNa volume was significantly decreased and MPNc volume
significantly increased in genotypic females exposed to testosterone
propionate (TP) on gestational days 28-37 or 28-65 but not 38-65. All 3
prenatal TP treatments administered to females significantly increased
mounting frequencies and suppressed lordosis, ovulation, and the
positive-feedback effects of estrogen and progesterone on luteinizing
hormone release. Thus, the volumetric sex differences in MPNa and MPNc
alone do not seem to be sufficient to account for the sex differences in
the functions of the medial preoptic region. It is, therefore, suggested
that androgens continue to exert organizational influences upon the
developing brain after cytoarchitectonic patterns have been determined.