Article (Scientific journals)
Testosterone Synthesis in the Female Songbird
de Bournonville, Catherine; McGrath, Aiden; Remage-Healey, Luke
2020In Hormones and Behavior
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Keywords :
Songbirds; Aromatase; Neurosteroids; Microdialysis; Communication; Non-genomic
Abstract :
[en] Decades of work have established the brain as a source of steroid hormones, termed ‘neurosteroids’. The neurosteroid neuroestradiol is produced in discrete brain areas and influences cognition, sensory processing, reproduction, neurotransmission, and disease. A prevailing research focus on neuroestradiol has essentially ignored whether its immediate synthesis precursor - the androgen testosterone - is also dynamically regulated within the brain. Testosterone itself can rapidly influence neurophysiology and behavior, and there is indirect evidence that the female brain may synthesize significant quantities of testosterone to regulate cognition, reproduction, and behavior. In songbirds, acoustic communication is regulated by neuroestrogens. Neuroestrogens are rapidly synthetized in the caudomedial nidopallium (NCM) of the auditory cortex of zebra finches in response to song and can influence auditory processing and song discrimination. Here, we examined the in vivo dynamics of NCM levels of the neuroestrogen synthesis precursor, testosterone. Unlike estradiol, testosterone did not appear to fluctuate in the female NCM during song exposure. However, a substantial song-induced elevation of testosterone was revealed in the left hemisphere NCM of females when local aromatization (i.e., conversion to estrogens) was locally blocked. This elevation was eliminated when local androgen synthesis was concomitantly blocked. Further, no parallel elevation was observed in the circulation in response to song playback, consistent with a local, neural origin of testosterone synthesis. To our knowledge, this study provides the first direct demonstration that testosterone fluctuates rapidly in the brain in response to socially-relevant environmentalstimuli. Our findings suggest therefore that locally-derived ‘neuroandrogens’ can dynamically influence brain function and behavior.
Disciplines :
Neurosciences & behavior
Author, co-author :
de Bournonville, Catherine ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Neurosciences-Neuroendocrinology
McGrath, Aiden;  University of Massachusetts > Psychological and Brain sciences > Center for Neuroendocrine Studies
Remage-Healey, Luke;  University of Massachusetts > Psychological and Brain sciences > Center for Neuroendocrine Studies
Language :
English
Title :
Testosterone Synthesis in the Female Songbird
Publication date :
2020
Journal title :
Hormones and Behavior
ISSN :
0018-506X
eISSN :
1095-6867
Publisher :
Elsevier, Atlanta, United States - California
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 05 June 2020

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