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Endocrinology, Vol 132, 2299-2306, Copyright © 1993 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Sexual differentiation of vasopressin projections of the bed nucleus of the stria terminals and medial amygdaloid nucleus in rats

Z Wang, NA Bullock and GJ De Vries
Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 01003.

The vasopressin-immunoreactive (AVP-ir) projections of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BST) and medial amygdaloid nucleus (MA) are much denser in males than in females even if males and females are treated with similar amounts of testosterone. Previous studies have established that testosterone influences AVP-ir projections during development, but not whether these effects of testosterone were permanent. This study tested the effects of various hormonal manipulations during development on the ability of testosterone to influence the AVP immunostaining in cells of the BST and MA and of fibers in the lateral septum of adult rats. In the first experiment, male rats that were castrated at 3 months of age (control males) had more AVP-ir cells in the BST and a higher density of AVP-ir fibers in the lateral septum than neonatally castrated male rats, whose cell numbers and fiber density did not differ from female rats that were ovariectomized neonatally or at 3 months of age (control females). This suggested that testicular secretions influence sexual differentiation of AVP-ir fiber pathways after birth. The second experiment showed that males castrated at the day of birth or at 1 week after birth had less AVP-ir cells in the BST and MA and a lower AVP-ir fiber density in the lateral septum than male rats castrated at the third week after birth or control males. This indicated that testicular secretions influenced the differentiation of AVP-ir pathways around postnatal day 7. This was further confirmed in the third experiment, in which testosterone propionate treatment at the seventh postnatal day significantly raised AVP-ir fiber density in the lateral septum of neonatally gonadectomized male and female rats and fully restored the number of AVP-ir cells in the BST of neonatally castrated males. Combined, these data suggest that testosterone levels around the seventh postnatal day determine the sexual differentiation of AVP-ir projections to the lateral septum.


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