Bottjer S W, Dignan T P
Department of Biology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles 90089-0371.
J Neurobiol. 1988 Oct;19(7):624-35. doi: 10.1002/neu.480190705.
Treatment of adult female canaries with testosterone (T) causes them to produce male-typical vocalizations and results in striking growth of brain nuclei that control song behavior (Nottebohm, 1980). The song-control nucleus HVc (caudal nucleus of the ventral hyperstriatum) contains cells that concentrate testosterone or its metabolites, suggesting that steroid hormones may induce the growth of HVc directly by regulating the expression of specific genes in those HVc neurons that have steroid receptors. However, we have previously provided evidence that is inconsistent with the idea that steroids promote growth of HVc solely via a direct action on hormone receptors: testosterone treatment of deafened adult females results in very little growth of HVc, relative to T-treated hearing birds (Bottjer et al., 1986b). Thus, birds in the former group undergo very little overall growth of HVc despite high circulating levels of hormone. We show here that the slightly increased size of HVc in T-treated deaf birds is attributable to an increase in neuronal spacing; the greatly increased size of HVc in T-treated hearing birds is due to an increase in neuronal number as well as spacing. There was virtually no increase in number of HVc neurons in T-treated deafened birds relative to control groups, whereas T-treated hearing birds showed a marked increase in neuron number. The song-control nucleus RA (robust nucleus of the archistriatum), which receives direct afferent input from HVc, also increases in size in response to testosterone treatment. However, the volume of RA increases in both hearing and deafened birds; this increase is primarily due to an increase in neuronal spacing as well as a small increase in neuron number. These results demonstrate that the number of neurons in a specific vocal-control nucleus (HVc) can change dramatically in adult canaries and suggest that some synergistic action of hormonal and sensory stimulation is necessary to induce such a change.
用睾酮(T)对成年雌性金丝雀进行处理,会使其发出雄性特有的叫声,并导致控制鸣叫行为的脑核显著生长(诺特博姆,1980年)。鸣叫控制核团HVC(腹侧纹状体尾核)中的细胞会聚集睾酮或其代谢产物,这表明类固醇激素可能通过调节那些具有类固醇受体的HVC神经元中特定基因的表达,直接诱导HVC的生长。然而,我们之前提供的证据与类固醇仅通过直接作用于激素受体来促进HVC生长的观点不一致:与接受T处理的有听力的鸟类相比,对成年失聪雌性金丝雀进行睾酮处理后,HVC的生长非常少(博捷尔等人,1986b)。因此,尽管前一组鸟类的激素循环水平很高,但HVC的总体生长却很少。我们在此表明,经T处理的失聪鸟类中HVC大小的轻微增加归因于神经元间距的增加;经T处理的有听力的鸟类中HVC大小的大幅增加是由于神经元数量和间距的增加。与对照组相比,经T处理的失聪鸟类中HVC神经元的数量几乎没有增加,而经T处理的有听力的鸟类中神经元数量则显著增加。接受来自HVC直接传入输入的鸣叫控制核团RA(古纹状体粗核),在接受睾酮处理后也会增大。然而,RA的体积在有听力和失聪的鸟类中都会增加;这种增加主要是由于神经元间距的增加以及神经元数量的少量增加。这些结果表明,成年金丝雀特定鸣叫控制核团(HVC)中的神经元数量可以发生显著变化,并表明激素和感觉刺激的某种协同作用对于诱导这种变化是必要的。