Perry Adam N, Grober Matthew S
Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Horm Behav. 2003 Jan;43(1):31-8. doi: 10.1016/s0018-506x(02)00036-3.
The optimal regulation of vertebrate sexual development and reproductive function involves integration of internal physiological signals, indicative of an individual's sexual status and capability for reproduction, with signals from the external environment. While these environmental cues are diverse, and oftentimes species-specific, the induction of sexual readiness is typically carried out through the same basic components of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis conserved among vertebrates. Therefore, species exhibiting diverse patterns of reproduction can contribute to the understanding of the general mechanisms underlying the expression of adult sexual phenotypes. The bluehead wrasse, Thalassoma bifasciatum, is a tropical coral reef fish that displays social control of sex change, whereby dominant males inhibit sex change in other members of the social group using aggressive interactions. In many fish species and vertebrates in general, individuals that lose these interactions often experience increased serum glucocorticoids, which can have a subsequent impact on their physiology and behavior. We discuss glucocorticoid regulation of both neuropeptide gene transcription and the major steroid biosynthetic pathways as potential mechanisms involved in the regulation of sex change in the bluehead wrasse. We present a model describing behavioral regulation of sex change in the bluehead wrasse and then describe the potential mechanistic roles of glucocorticoids, gonadal steroids, and neuropeptides in generating the changes predicted by the model. Through the use of alternative model systems it is possible to observe novel interactions among the neuroendocrine axes that regulate major life history events, like reproduction. These insights may then shed light on similar functional mechanisms underlying behavioral regulation of reproduction in all vertebrates.
脊椎动物性发育和生殖功能的最佳调节涉及整合内部生理信号(指示个体的性状态和生殖能力)与来自外部环境的信号。虽然这些环境线索多种多样,而且通常具有物种特异性,但性成熟的诱导通常是通过脊椎动物中保守的下丘脑 - 垂体 - 性腺轴的相同基本组成部分来进行的。因此,表现出不同繁殖模式的物种有助于理解成体性表型表达的一般机制。蓝头濑鱼(Thalassoma bifasciatum)是一种热带珊瑚礁鱼类,它表现出对性别变化的社会控制,即占主导地位的雄性通过攻击性互动抑制社会群体中其他成员的性别变化。在许多鱼类和一般脊椎动物中,失去这些互动的个体通常会经历血清糖皮质激素增加,这随后可能会对它们的生理和行为产生影响。我们讨论糖皮质激素对神经肽基因转录和主要类固醇生物合成途径的调节,将其作为参与蓝头濑鱼性别变化调节的潜在机制。我们提出了一个描述蓝头濑鱼性别变化行为调节的模型,然后描述了糖皮质激素、性腺类固醇和神经肽在产生该模型预测的变化中的潜在机制作用。通过使用替代模型系统,有可能观察到调节主要生命史事件(如繁殖)的神经内分泌轴之间的新型相互作用。这些见解可能会揭示所有脊椎动物生殖行为调节背后的类似功能机制。