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The Journal of Neuroscience, July 1, 1999, 19(13):5597-5601
Direct Androgenic Regulation of Calcitonin Gene-Related
Peptide Expression in Motoneurons of Rats with Mosaic
Androgen Insensitivity
Douglas A.
Monks,
Claire M.
Vanston, and
Neil V.
Watson
Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British
Columbia, V5A 1S6 Canada
 |
ABSTRACT |
The spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) and its target
muscles, bulbocavernosus and levator ani (BC/LA), form a sexually dimorphic neuromuscular circuit whose development and maintenance are
androgen-dependent. The mechanisms whereby androgen regulates gene
expression in the SNB of adult rats are largely unknown, although a
retrograde influence from the BC/LA muscles has been suggested to
underlie the suppression of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)
expression observed in SNB motoneurons after systemic androgen
treatment. A mosaic paradigm was used to determine the site of action
of androgen in the regulation of CGRP expression in SNB motoneurons. As
a consequence of random X chromosome inactivation, androgenized female
rats heterozygous for the tfm androgen receptor (AR)
mutation (XwtXtfm-mosaics)
express a mosaic of androgen-sensitive and androgen-insensitive motoneurons in the SNB, whereas the BC/LA target musculature appears to
be uniformly sensitive to androgens. In adult mosaics, testosterone administration resulted in a reduction in the proportion of
androgen-sensitive cells expressing CGRP, whereas no such reduction was
observed in the androgen-insensitive population, indicating that
neuronal AR plays an essential role in the neuromuscular regulation of CGRP expression in these motoneurons. This provides the first in
vivo demonstration of AR regulation of gene expression
unambiguously localized to a neuronal population.
Key words:
mosaic; androgen receptor; spinal nucleus of the
bulbocavernosus; bulbocavernosus; levator ani; sexual dimorphism; androgen; tfm mutation; penile reflexes; calcitonin gene-related
peptide; cell autonomous
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Current opinion holds that target
muscles regulate many aspects of motoneuron physiology (Vrbova et al.,
1994
). The spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) is a sexually
dimorphic neuromuscular system whose survival and development are
androgen-dependent (Breedlove and Arnold 1981
; Freeman et al., 1996
),
as is the functional and morphological maintenance of the SNB in
adulthood (Hart, 1979
; Tanaka and Arnold 1993
; Watson et al., 1996
).
However, it has proven difficult to establish the site of action of
androgens in the adult, because both the SNB motoneurons and their
targets, the perineal muscles bulbocavernosus and levator ani (BC/LA), are androgen-sensitive (Dube et al., 1975
; Breedlove and Arnold, 1981
;
Jordan et al., 1997
).
The phenotypic mosaic resulting from the mammalian process of embryonic
random X chromosome inactivation (Lyon, 1961
; Monk and Harper, 1979
)
has recently been exploited as a method of localizing androgenic action
in the SNB (Freeman et al., 1996
; Watson et al., 1996
). Specifically,
androgenized female rats heterozygous for the tfm mutation
(XwtXtfm), which codes a
nonfunctional androgen receptor (AR), have been generated to study
AR-mediated events in the SNB (Fig. 1).
Because early androgen treatment rescues SNB motoneurons indirectly
through its actions on the BC/LA muscles (for review, see Forger et
al., 1992
), these animals exhibit a mosaic of androgen-sensitive and androgen-insensitive motoneurons within the SNB in adulthood (Freeman et al., 1996
). This mosaic paradigm has been used to demonstrate both
direct and indirect effects of androgen on SNB motoneuron survival and
morphology (Freeman et al., 1996
; Watson et al., 1996
).

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Figure 1.
Diagram of the SNB mosaic model. Because the
androgen receptor gene is situated on the X chromosome and SNB
motoneuronal survival is not dependent on intraneuronal androgen
receptor status (Freeman et al., 1996 ), androgenized females carrying
the tfm androgen receptor mutation (mosaic animals) have
~50:50 blend of androgen-sensitive wild-type neurons and
androgen-insensitive tfm neurons in the SNB, with muscle
fibers being multinucleate mosaics (Freeman et al., 1996 ). For
simplicity, SNB motoneurons are represented as synapsing on one muscle
fiber, whereas a typical SNB motoneuron will synapse on ~200 LA
muscle fibers, and each fiber may be innervated by more than one
motoneuron (Jordan et al., 1992 ). This SNB mosaic allows for
localization of androgenic action as effects of androgen mediated
locally within SNB motoneurons (B) should be
present only in cells expressing functional androgen receptors and only
in the presence of androgen, whereas effects arising indirectly from
actions on other target tissues (A) should be
present in all SNB motoneurons, whether or not they express functional
androgen receptors.
|
|
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is an example of a peptide
downregulated by androgen in the SNB (Popper and Micevych, 1989
). CGRP
has been implicated in potentiation of cholinergic transmission (Lu et
al., 1993
) by upregulating muscle acetylcholine receptor (New and
Mudge, 1986
) and acetylcholinesterase expression (Hodges-Savola and
Fernandez, 1995
), as well as in preventing disuse-induced sprouting
in vivo (Tsujimoto and Kuno, 1988
).
Previous work has suggested that androgenic downregulation of CGRP mRNA
expression in SNB motoneurons may be mediated indirectly via the BC/LA
target musculature. In rats, target muscle paralysis or intramuscular
injection of BC/LA muscle extracts from castrated or intact males
regulates the proportion of SNB motoneurons expressing CGRP in adult
males (Popper et al., 1992a
,b
). Furthermore, the proportion of
motoneurons expressing CGRP in various motoneuron pools, including the
SNB, correlates with muscle activity (Blanco et al., 1997
).
Using tfm mosaic animals, we evaluated the alternative
possibility that androgens act directly on SNB motoneurons to regulate CGRP synthesis. The approach taken was to compare the effects of
chronic systemic testosterone on neighboring SNB cells in
tfm mosaic animals. If androgen acts directly on SNB
motoneurons to regulate CGRP expression, androgen treatment should
attenuate CGRP expression primarily in neurons containing functional
AR. If, however, androgen acts indirectly via its effects on the BC/LA musculature, it would be expected that androgen treatment would attenuate CGRP expression in both tfm and wild-type SNB motoneurons.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Generation of mosaic animals. All animals were
obtained from breeding colonies at Simon Fraser University (Burnaby,
British Columbia, Canada) or the University of California, Berkeley
(Berkeley, CA). Mosaic animals were generated by the breeding of known
carriers of the tfm mutation. Carriers
(XwtXtfm) of the tfm
mutation, identified by the presence of pups with internal testes in
previous litters, were placed with a sexually vigorous male until
copulatory plugs were seen, and the appearance of plugs was taken as
the day of conception, embryonic day 0 (E0). Pregnant carriers received
daily subcutaneous injections of 2.0 mg of testosterone propionate (TP)
(Steraloids, Wilton, NH) in oil from E16 through E21. The prenatal
injections of TP serve to maximize SNB motoneuron survival in the pups
(Ward et al., 1996
), as well as to distinguish between wild-type
females, whose nipple lines are completely masculinized by prenatal
testosterone (Goldman et al., 1976
), and tfm mosaic females,
who form a partial nipple line because of the presence of
androgen-insensitive nipple tissue. Exogenous perinatal testosterone
administration occasionally inhibits vaginal delivery; consequently,
litters not delivered by E22 were removed by cesarean section under
ether anesthesia. Pups delivered by cesarean section were
cross-fostered to a recently parturient lactating wild-type female.
Carriers undergoing cesarean section were killed immediately
after surgery via a lethal dose of sodium pentobarbitol. Pups were
further treated with 1.0 mg of TP subcutaneously on postnatal days 1 (P1) and P3 to maximally masculinize the SNB system (Ward et al.,
1996
).
The genotype of these androgenized animals was determined at P30
according to the system of phenotypic markers used by Freeman et al.
(1996)
. Briefly, (1) pups with inguinal testes but expressing a full
nipple line were identified as tfm-affected males; (2) pups
with inguinal or external testes but not expressing a nipple line were
identified as wild-type males; (3) pups without inguinal testes but not
expressing a nipple line were identified as masculinized wild-type
females; and (4) pups without inguinal testes and expressing a partial
nipple line were identified as masculinized mosaic females. For all
experimental animals, identification was verified through dissection of
the reproductive tract at the conclusion of the experiment. This
process revealed the presence of three tfm-affected males
misidentified as masculinized mosaic females. These animals were
excluded from further analysis.
Hormone manipulation in adulthood. At 60 d of age, 11 animals identified as mosaics received 2 × 20 mm SILASTIC
(Dow Corning, Midland, MI) implants (1.57 mm inner diameter, 3.18 mm
outer diameter) packed with crystalline testosterone
(Steraloids). Implants of this size yield plasma testosterone
levels in the high physiological range (Damassa et al., 1977
). Twelve
60-d-old animals identified as mosaics received 2 × 20 mm empty
SILASTIC implants. SILASTIC implants were placed subcutaneously between
the scapulae under ether anesthesia.
After 4-6 weeks, the implants were removed under ether anesthesia.
After an additional 24-36 hr, animals received subcutaneously either
0.2 or 2.0 mg of hydroxyflutamide (OH-F) (generous gift of R. Neri,
Schering-Plough Research Institute, Kenilworth, NJ) in 0.1 ml of
propylene glycol. OH-F binds to the AR and induces nuclear
translocation of the ligand-receptor complex, facilitating immunocytochemical analysis without itself inducing AR-mediated gene
transcription (Kemppainen et al., 1992
). The two doses of OH-F that
were administered served as a control to ensure this anti-androgen was
not itself altering CGRP expression. No effect of OH-F dose on the
proportion of SNB cells identified as expressing CGRP or AR was
observed. All animals were perfused 4-6 hr after OH-F injection.
Perfusion and tissue preparation. Animals received an
overdose of sodium pentobarbital (~50 mg, i.p.), and, on
achievement of surgical anesthesia as measured by the disappearance of
deep reflexes, were perfused transcardially with 200 ml of ice-cold PBS, pH 7.4, over 20 min, followed by 200 ml of ice-cold 4%
paraformaldehyde-PBS, pH 7.4, over 20 min. Spinal cords were
post-fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 2 hr at 4°C. Tissue was then
transferred to 20% sucrose-PBS at 4°C until the spinal cords sank,
after which tissue was sectioned coronally at a thickness of 50 µm on
a freezing microtome. Spinal sections corresponding to L5-L6 and S1
were sequentially collected into de Olmos solution (a propylene
glycol-based antigen-conserving cryopreservent; Watson et al., 1986
)
and stored at
20°C until immunocytochemistry was performed.
Every third SNB section collected from each animal was used for
immunocytochemistry and data collection.
Immunocytochemistry. All reactions were performed at room
temperature unless otherwise indicated. Tissue was placed in tissue wells and rinsed five times for 10 min in PBS solution containing 0.1%
gelatin and 0.3% Triton X-100 (Sigma, Oakville, Ontario, Canada).
Sequential immunocytochemical double-labeling of AR and CGRP was then
performed as follows. Endogenous peroxidase activity was quenched by
immersion in 0.3% H2O2 for 30 min. After
rinsing, the free-floating sections were incubated with
PBS-gelatin-Triton (PBS-GT) containing 10% normal goat serum
(NGS) (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for 1 hr to prevent
nonspecific secondary antibody binding. AR immunoreactivity was
assessed using the rabbit polyclonal primary antibody PG21, directed
against the 21 amino acid C-terminal epitope of the AR (generous gift
of Gail Prins, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL). PG21 has been
characterized previously in the rat SNB, and SNB AR-IR has been shown
to discriminate between motoneurons expressing wild-type AR, which
exhibit dense nuclear labeling, and motoneurons expressing
nonfunctional tfm mutant AR, which exhibit light, diffuse
cytoplasmic staining and clear nuclei (Freeman et al., 1995
). Tissue
was incubated at 4°C for 36-48 hr with PG21 primary antiserum
diluted 1:3000 in PBS-GT containing 1% NGS, under constant agitation
on a mixing platform. After rinsing, tissue was incubated with
biotin-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antiserum (Vector Laboratories) at
1:250 dilution in PBS-GT for 1 hr. Tissue was rinsed and then
incubated with avidin-biotin peroxidase complex (Vectastain Elite;
Vector Laboratories) for 1 hr. AR labeling was subsequently visualized
using 3,3' diaminobenzidine (DAB) (Sigma) in the presence of hydrogen
peroxide and nickel chloride in 0.1 M Tris buffer, pH 7.2, resulting in a blue-black label. Tissue was thoroughly rinsed of DAB
solution, and CGRP immunocytochemistry was begun.
CGRP immunoreactivity was assessed using a rabbit polyclonal antiserum
directed against synthetic rat CGRP (Peninsula Laboratories, Belmont,
CA). Sections were again incubated in 10% NGS for 1 hr, followed by
incubation for 48 hr in CGRP antiserum diluted 1:16000, at 4°C under
constant agitation on a mixing platform. Sections were rinsed and
incubated with biotin-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antiserum
in PBS-GT (1:250 dilution) for 1 hr. After rinsing, sections were
incubated in avidin-biotin complex for 1 hr, rinsed, and visualized
using DAB without nickel enhancement, yielding a red-brown label.
Sections were thoroughly rinsed of DAB solution, mounted on
gelatin-coated slides, and coverslipped with Permount (Fisher
Scientific, Springfield, NJ) after dehydration through graded alcohols
and clearing in xylene.
Identification of CGRP-IR and AR-IR cells. Sections were
analyzed under a light microscope (Optiphot-2; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) at
200× magnification by an experimenter blind to experimental condition
(see Fig. 2 for representative photomicrographs). A second observer
scored six randomly selected animals as a reliability check.
Wild-type SNB cells were identified as those exhibiting a black nuclear
label, whereas tfm SNB cells were identified as those with
unlabeled nuclei. SNB cells exhibiting a dark red-brown cytoplasmic label were identified as CGRP-positive, whereas cells exhibiting very
light or no cytoplasmic label were identified as CGRP-negative. Cells
rated as immunoreactive for either or both proteins were mapped and
labeled using a camera lucida attachment.
After identification of immunoreactive SNB cells, coverslips were
soaked off in xylene and counterstained with Neutral Red (Sigma). SNB
cells unlabeled by either antiserum were identified and added to the
cell maps generated in the preceding step. As a result of this
procedure, every motoneuron in each mosaic animal's SNB was assigned
to one of the four possible categories: (1) cells containing both
labels (AR+/CGRP+), consisting of wild-type neurons expressing CGRP;
(2) wild-type cells showing the nuclear AR label but not expressing
CGRP (AR+/CGRP
); (3) cells containing neither label (AR
/CGRP
),
consisting of tfm cells not expressing CGRP; and (4) tfm cells
containing the CGRP label but not the nuclear AR label (AR
/CGRP+). To
arrive at a conservative estimate of AR and CGRP expression, cells
containing only very light AR or CGRP labeling were considered to be
unlabeled. After classification, the number of SNB motoneurons within
each category was calculated for each animal.
Analyses. After normalization of the proportion data using
an arcsine transformation (Ferguson and Takane, 1989
), a 2 × 2 factorial ANOVA was performed for cell type (wild-type vs
tfm) by treatment condition (testosterone vs blank
implants). Subsequent planned comparisons of group means were performed
using t tests. Only animals having at least 20 SNB
motoneurons, an index for masculinization in this system, were included
in statistical analyses; four animals were excluded under this
criterion, yielding a total of six testosterone-treated mosaic animals
and 10 mosaic animals not treated with steroid.
 |
RESULTS |
Effects of ARs and testosterone exposure on
CGRP immunoreactivity
In these mosaic animals, the downregulation of CGRP expression by
testosterone was clearly limited to the wild-type SNB neurons, containing functional AR (Figs. 2,
3). These data strongly suggest that androgen acts directly via intraneuronal AR to regulate CGRP expression. ANOVA (treatment by cell type) revealed a significant effect for cell type (df = 1,14; F = 8.528; p < 0.05), and subsequent t tests
revealed that significantly fewer wild-type than tfm cells expressed CGRP labeling in the testosterone implanted group
(df = 5; t = 3.487; p < 0.05) but not in the group receiving blank implants
(df = 9; t = 1.146; p > 0.05).

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Figure 2.
Photomicrographs of tfm-mosaic SNB
motoneurons. a, Wild-type (androgen
receptor-immunoreactive) cells weakly CGRP-immunoreactive.
b, tfm cells strongly
CGRP-immunoreactive. c, Wild-type (androgen
receptor-immunoreactive) cell strongly CGRP-immunoreactive. Original
magnification, 200×. Scale bar, 50 µm.
|
|

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Figure 3.
Effects of testosterone treatment on proportion of
CGRP-IR mosaic SNB motoneurons by cell type. Data are grouped into
wild-type cells, which are immunoreactive for androgen receptor
and thus expressing functional androgen receptors, and
tfm cells, which are not immunoreactive for androgen
receptor and thus do not possess functional androgen receptors.
Dark bars represent animals receiving testosterone
implants in adulthood, and light bars indicate animals
receiving blank implants in adulthood. Only the androgen-sensitive
wild-type population shows a decrease in the proportion of cells
immunoreactive for CGRP in response to androgen treatment.
*p < 0.05; t test. Error
bars indicate SEM.
|
|
Degree of observed mosaicism
As predicted with random X chromosome inactivation, the mean
proportion of SNB cells immunoreactive for AR was found to be 49.8%,
ranging from 30 to 70% (Table 1). This
agrees well with previous descriptions of AR mosaicism in the rat
(Freeman et al., 1996
). No difference in the degree of mosaicism was
observed between the two hormone treatment groups (independent samples
t test; df = 14; t =
0.47;
p > 0.05).
 |
DISCUSSION |
It is clear from the present study that the androgenic regulation
of CGRP expression in SNB motoneurons is mediated locally. Functional
AR within SNB motoneurons are necessary for the androgenic suppression
of SNB motoneuronal CGRP expression. This constitutes the first
in vivo demonstration of AR regulation of gene expression unambiguously localized to a specific neural population. The apparent involvement of the intraneuronal AR in the regulation of CGRP expression in the SNB is surprising in light of previous indirect evidence suggesting that the site of action of androgen in modulating SNB CGRP production is the target musculature (Popper et al., 1992a
,b
).
Although not statistically significant, a smaller proportion of
androgen-sensitive SNB cells appears to express CGRP relative to the
androgen-insensitive population. Because mosaic animals were neither
gonadectomized nor adrenalectomized, this may reflect the actions of
endogenous steroids on the functional androgen receptors expressed by
these cells. If this is indeed the case, the sensitivity of AR-mediated
downregulation of CGRP expression in this system argues for the
importance of this process in the course of normal physiology.
Alternately, this may reflect a permanent attenuation of adult levels
of CGRP expression by perinatal androgens.
Because continued androgen exposure is necessary to maintain low levels
of CGRP mRNA (Popper and Micevych, 1990
), the most parsimonious
interpretation of the present result is a genomic effect of the AR in
downregulating CGRP gene expression. Nevertheless, the possibility that
CGRP expression is downstream from the genomic effects of the AR in SNB
motoneurons remains untested. Several factors regulating motoneuronal
CGRP expression have been described, both in vivo and
in vitro, including the following: upregulation by nerve
growth factor after spinal hemisection (Christensen and Hulsebosch,
1997
), downregulation by basic fibroblast growth factor after sciatic
nerve transection (Piehl et al., 1998
), as well as upregulation by
ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and downregulation by basic
fibroblast growth factor in primary cultures of rat motoneurons (Piehl
et al., 1998
). It is unclear whether and to what extent these factors
contribute to the suppression of CGRP expression in SNB motoneurons by
AR. It is known, for example, that androgen regulates CNTF receptor
expression in SNB motoneurons and in BC/LA target muscles (Xu and
Forger, 1998
).
Two assumptions inherent in the present model warrant further
discussion. The method of genotype identification used (Freeman et al.,
1996
), although imperfect, likely underestimates the magnitude of
AR-mediated regulation of CGRP expression in SNB motoneurons, because
any misclassifications of SNB motoneuron genotype in mosaic animals
(Freeman et al., 1996
) would serve to diminish the observed effect
size. Similarly, the assumption of uniform postsynaptic androgen
sensitivity in mosaic animals is warranted by observations of high
levels (similar to wild-type littermates) of AR antigenicity in mosaic
LA targets (Freeman et al., 1996
), as well as observations that each
SNB motoneuron innervates hundreds of LA muscle fibers and that LA
fibers are often multiply innervated (Jordan et al., 1992
).
The results of this study challenge the view that androgenic action on
the BC/LA target musculature is sufficient for the regulation of CGRP
levels in the SNB. Previous work reporting that injections of a BC/LA
crude muscle extract modulates SNB CGRP mRNA levels (Popper et al.,
1992a
,b
) suggests that the target musculature may be sufficient to
increase CGRP expression in the SNB. However, it is not clear that this
type of regulation underlies the suppression of CGRP expression in
SNB motoneurons by androgen. Muscle may be involved in the
regulation of CGRP levels in SNB motoneurons, but the suppression of
CGRP expression resulting from systemic androgen in physiological doses
requires functional AR expression in SNB motoneurons.
An interpretation that may reconcile both the mosaic data and the
extract injection findings is that the AR in SNB motoneurons has a
permissive role in a process of androgenic regulation of CGRP, which
includes muscular events. For example, androgen may act on muscle to
regulate trophic factor secretion and on motoneurons to regulate
cognate receptor expression, enabling a synergistic response to
androgen exposure. Because the developmental action of androgen on the
SNB is mediated through the target musculature (Freeman et al., 1995
;
Jordan et al., 1997
) and paralysis of muscles leads to increased CGRP
expression in SNB motoneurons (Popper and Micevych, 1989
), such a
mechanism is plausible.
Establishing the role of target musculature in the regulation of
motoneurons has proven an especially difficult question to address in
the SNB, whose maintenance is regulated by androgens that act on both
SNB motoneurons and their target muscles. The use of a mosaic model has
simplified the problem of localizing androgenic effects on this system.
Where elaborate and indirect methodologies have been necessary to
approach this question in vivo, the mosaic model offers a
more direct methodology, and the present study provides a demonstration
of its utility in studies of gene expression. To date, no mosaic
studies have been reported in androgen-regulated neural systems other
than the SNB, although such studies may prove valuable in establishing
the role of AR activity in the development and maintenance of sexual
dimorphism in the nervous system and behavior.
Mosaic studies of gene expression extend the resolution of in
vivo genetic analysis from tissue events to cellular events, and
in the case of mosaic SNB studies, further allows for the discrimination of developmental effects and those occurring in adulthood, a limitation of gene "knock-out" approaches (Nelson, 1997
). With advances in recombinant technologies, the possibility of
experimentally inducing mosaic expression of genes other than those
normally found on the X chromosome is emerging (Kedzierski et al.,
1998
).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 28, 1999; revised March 22, 1999; accepted April 9, 1999.
This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS28421
and Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Grant
0194522. We are grateful to Drs. Marc Breedlove and Cindy Jordan
(University of California, Berkeley) for invaluable and innumerable
contributions of expert advice and material.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Neil V. Watson, Department of
Psychology, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby,
British Columbia, V5A 1S6 Canada.
 |
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N. V. Watson, L. M. Freeman, and S. M. Breedlove
Neuronal Size in the Spinal Nucleus of the Bulbocavernosus: Direct Modulation by Androgen in Rats with Mosaic Androgen Insensitivity
J. Neurosci.,
February 1, 2001;
21(3):
1062 - 1066.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
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