Koshibu Kyoko, Ahrens Eric T, Levitt Pat
Department of Neurobiology and Center for Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA.
J Neurosci. 2005 Apr 13;25(15):3870-80. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0175-05.2005.
Sex- and age-associated deficits in brain structure and behavior are reported in a number of neuropsychiatric disorders. Although genetic and environmental factors are thought to contribute to the pathogenesis, there are only few examples in clinical or experimental systems that have identified specific causes. Here, we report that transforming growth factor-alpha (TGFalpha) may regulate sex- and age-dependent development of forebrain structures and associated neural functions after puberty. Waved-1 (Wa-1) mice inherit an autosomal recessive, spontaneous mutation that results in a postnatal reduction in TGFalpha gene expression. The assessment of forebrain structures using a three-dimensional magnetic resonance microscopy indicated ventricular enlargement and striatal reduction in both male and female Wa-1 adult mice, with Wa-1 males exhibiting a more severe phenotype. In contrast, the hippocampal volume was reduced only in adult Wa-1 males. Similarly, behavioral analyses showed impaired auditory and contextual fear learning in adult Wa-1 males only, whereas abnormal stress response was expressed by both male and female adult Wa-1 mice. Interestingly, all behavioral deficits were absent before full sexual maturation, despite some slight forebrain structural abnormalities. These results suggest that TGFalpha may regulate postpubertal, sex differentiation in ventricular and periventricular anatomy and associated behavior, affecting predominantly males. In particular, the adult male-specific reduction in hippocampal volume may reflect an age- and sex-specific regulation of stress homeostasis and fear learning. Furthermore, a lack of a behavioral phenotype, despite anatomical alterations in peripubertal Wa-1 mice, suggests that analysis of certain neuroanatomical features at puberty may predict neurobehavioral deficits in adulthood.
许多神经精神疾病都报告了大脑结构和行为方面与性别和年龄相关的缺陷。尽管遗传和环境因素被认为与发病机制有关,但在临床或实验系统中,只有少数例子确定了具体原因。在此,我们报告转化生长因子-α(TGFα)可能在青春期后调节前脑结构的性别和年龄依赖性发育以及相关的神经功能。Waved-1(Wa-1)小鼠继承了一种常染色体隐性自发突变,导致出生后TGFα基因表达降低。使用三维磁共振显微镜对前脑结构进行评估表明,成年雄性和雌性Wa-1小鼠均出现脑室扩大和纹状体缩小,其中Wa-1雄性小鼠表现出更严重的表型。相比之下,仅成年Wa-1雄性小鼠的海马体积减小。同样,行为分析表明,仅成年Wa-1雄性小鼠的听觉和情境恐惧学习受损,而成年雄性和雌性Wa-1小鼠均表现出异常的应激反应。有趣的是,尽管存在一些轻微的前脑结构异常,但在完全性成熟之前所有行为缺陷均不存在。这些结果表明,TGFα可能调节青春期后的脑室和脑室周围解剖结构的性别分化以及相关行为,主要影响雄性。特别是,成年雄性特异性的海马体积减小可能反映了应激稳态和恐惧学习的年龄和性别特异性调节。此外,尽管青春期前Wa-1小鼠存在解剖学改变,但缺乏行为表型,这表明对青春期某些神经解剖特征的分析可能预测成年期的神经行为缺陷。