Volume 17, Number 3,
Issue of February 1, 1997
pp. 1122-1136
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Estrogen Induces Axonal Outgrowth in the Nucleus
Retroambiguus-Lumbosacral Motoneuronal Pathway in the Adult Female
Cat
Received July 11, 1996; revised Oct. 21, 1996; accepted Nov. 5, 1996.
Veronique G. J. M. VanderHorst and
Gert Holstege
Department of Anatomy and Embryology, Faculty of
Medicine, University of Groningen, 9713 EZ Groningen, The
Netherlands
In 1995, we discovered a new pathway in the cat, which
originates from the nucleus retroambiguus (NRA) and terminates in a distinct set of lumbosacral hindlimb, axial, and pelvic floor motoneuronal cell groups [VanderHorst VGJM, Holstege G (1995) Caudal
medullary pathways to lumbosacral motoneuronal cell groups in the cat:
evidence for direct projections possibly representing the final common
pathway for lordosis. J Comp Neurol 359:457-475]. The NRA is a
compact group of interneurons located laterally in the caudal medulla
oblongata. Its projection to lumbosacral motoneurons is thought to
represent the final common pathway for male mounting and for female
receptive or lordosis behavior. However, females only display lordosis
behavior when they are in estrus, which suggests that
the NRA-lumbosacral pathway is only active during estrus. This raised
the question of whether estrogen affects this pathway. The effect of
estrogen on the NRA-lumbosacral projection was studied light
microscopically, using wheat-germ agglutinin horseradish peroxidase
(WGA-HRP) as a tracer. The rubrospinal pathway served as control. The
density of labeled NRA fibers in their target hindlimb motoneuronal
cell groups appeared abundant in estrous and very weak in nonestrous
cats. Such differences were not found in the rubrospinal pathway. For
electron microscopical study, the NRA projection to the semimembranosus
motoneuronal cell group was selected. In this cell group, an almost
ninefold increase of labeled profiles was found in estrous versus
nonestrous cats. Moreover, the semimembranous motoneuronal cell group
contained labeled growth cones in estrous, but not in nonestrous, cats. The present study is the first to show that estrogen induces axonal outgrowth of a precisely identified pathway in the adult mammalian central nervous system. The possible mechanisms underlying this outgrowth are discussed.
Key words:
estrogen;
motoneuron;
sexual behavior;
spinal cord;
nucleus retroambiguus;
caudal medulla;
cat;
female;
plasticity;
sprouting;
growth cone;
ventral horn;
lordosis behavior;
sex steroid;
WGA-HRP;
hindlimb;
muscle;
semimembranosus;
pelvic floor;
iliopsoas;
adductor longus;
biceps femoris