Kaur Gurjinder, Janik James, Isaacson Lori G, Callahan Phyllis
Center for Neuroscience and Behavior, Department of Zoology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA.
Brain Res. 2007 Mar 30;1139:6-14. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2006.12.084. Epub 2007 Jan 8.
We hypothesize that estrogen exerts a modulatory effect on sympathetic neurons to reduce neural cardiovascular tone and that these effects are modulated by nerve growth factor (NGF), a neurotrophin that regulates sympathetic neuron survival and maintenance. We examined the effects of estrogen on NGF and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) protein content in specific vascular targets. Ovariectomized, adult Sprague-Dawley rats were implanted with placebo or 17beta-estradiol (release rate, 0.05 mg/day). Fourteen days later, NGF levels in the superior cervical ganglia (SCG) and its targets, the heart, external carotid artery, and the extracerebral blood vessels, as well as estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) content levels in the heart, were determined using semi-quantitative Western blot analysis. TH levels in the SCG and extracerebral blood vessels were determined by Western blotting and immunocytochemistry, respectively. Circulating levels of 17beta-estradiol and prolactin (PRL) were quantified by RIA. Estrogen replacement significantly decreased NGF protein in the SCG and its targets, the external carotid artery, heart and extracerebral blood vessels. TH protein associated with the extracerebral blood vessels was also significantly decreased, but ERalpha levels were significantly increased in the heart following estrogen replacement. These results indicate that estrogen reduces NGF protein content in sympathetic vascular targets, which may lead to decreased sympathetic innervations to these targets, and therefore reduced sympathetic regulation. In addition, the estrogen-induced increase in ERalpha levels in the heart, a target tissue of the SCG, suggests that estrogen may sensitize the heart to further estrogen modulation, and possibly increase vasodilation of the coronary vasculature.
我们推测,雌激素对交感神经元发挥调节作用以降低神经心血管张力,且这些作用受神经生长因子(NGF)调节,NGF是一种调节交感神经元存活和维持的神经营养因子。我们研究了雌激素对特定血管靶点中NGF和酪氨酸羟化酶(TH)蛋白含量的影响。对成年去卵巢的Sprague-Dawley大鼠植入安慰剂或17β-雌二醇(释放速率为0.05 mg/天)。十四天后,使用半定量蛋白质免疫印迹分析测定颈上神经节(SCG)及其靶点心脏、颈外动脉和脑外血管中的NGF水平,以及心脏中的雌激素受体α(ERα)含量水平。分别通过蛋白质免疫印迹和免疫细胞化学法测定SCG和脑外血管中的TH水平。通过放射免疫分析法对循环中的17β-雌二醇和催乳素(PRL)水平进行定量。雌激素替代疗法显著降低了SCG及其靶点颈外动脉、心脏和脑外血管中的NGF蛋白。与脑外血管相关的TH蛋白也显著降低,但雌激素替代后心脏中的ERα水平显著升高。这些结果表明,雌激素降低了交感血管靶点中的NGF蛋白含量,这可能导致对这些靶点的交感神经支配减少,从而降低交感神经调节。此外,雌激素诱导的SCG靶组织心脏中ERα水平升高,表明雌激素可能使心脏对进一步的雌激素调节敏感,并可能增加冠状血管的血管舒张。