Neuroanatomy and sex differences of the lordosis-inhibiting system in the lateral septum

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Abstract

Female sexual behavior in rodents, termed lordosis, is controlled by facilitatory and inhibitory systems in the brain. It has been well demonstrated that a neural pathway from the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN) to the midbrain central gray (MCG) is essential for facilitatory regulation of lordosis. The neural pathway from the arcuate nucleus to the VMN, via the medial preoptic nucleus, in female rats mediates transient suppression of lordosis, until female sexual receptivity is induced. In addition to this pathway, other regions are involved in inhibitory regulation of lordosis in female rats. The lordosis-inhibiting systems exist not only in the female brain but also in the male brain. The systems contribute to suppression of heterotypical sexual behavior in male rats, although they have the potential ability to display lordosis. The lateral septum (LS) exerts an inhibitory influence on lordosis in both female and male rats. This review focuses on the neuroanatomy and sex differences of the lordosis-inhibiting system in the LS. The LS functionally and anatomically links to the MCG to exert suppression of lordosis. Neurons of the intermediate part of the LS (LSi) serve as lordosis-inhibiting neurons and project axons to the MCG. The LSi-MCG neural connection is sexually dimorphic, and formation of the male-like LSi-MCG neural connection is affected by aromatized testosterone originating from the testes in the postnatal period. The sexually dimorphic LSi-MCG neural connection may reflect the morphological basis of sex differences in the inhibitory regulation of lordosis in rats.

Figures

  • FIGURE 1 | Photographs of rats displaying sexual behaviors. An estradiol-treated ovariectomized female rat displays lordosis in response to the mounting of a vigorous male rat (A,B). An estradiol-treated castrated male rat does not exhibit lordosis (C). However, an estradiol-treated castrated male exhibits lordosis when the lateral septum is surgically destructed (D).
  • FIGURE 2 | Effects of a ventral cut of the LS (VC) on lordotic activity and neural projection from the LS to MCG in male rats. (A) Estradiol-17β (E2)-treated castrated male rats with or without VC were tested for lordosis behavior and then injected with Fluoro-Gold (FG), a retrograde neurotracer, into the MCG. FG-labeled neurons in the LS were detected by immunohistochemistry. (B) The mean LQ of E2-treated castrated male rats with VC (VC male) was increased over time (days) after E2 treatment, like an E2-treated ovariectomized female (control female), but the mean LQ of E2-treated castrated male rats without VC (control male) was low. (C) Photomicrographs of the LS of control and VC male rats that received FG
  • FIGURE 3 | Neural projection of the LS in rats. (A) Distribution of Phasiolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHAL), an anterograde neurotracer, -labeled neural fibers in an estradiol-treated castrated male rat that received PHAL injection into the LS on the right side (modified from Tsukahara and Yamanouchi, 2001). (B) Possible lordosis-inhibiting neural tract from the LSi to MCG. AH, anterior hypothalamic area; LS, lateral septum; MCG, midbrain central gray; MFB, medial forebrain bundle; mPOA, medial preoptic area; PH, posterior hypothalamic area; VMN, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus.
  • FIGURE 4 | Sex difference in neural projection from the LSi to MCG and effects of postnatal treatment with estradiol benzoate (EB) in the formation of the neural projection. Distribution of Fluoro-Gold (FG)-labeled neurons in the LS (A) and the number of FG-labeled neurons in the LSi (B) of female and male rats that received FG injection into the MCG. Female rats were subcutaneously injected with 50 or 100μg of EB or vehicle on postnatal day 5 (day 1 = date of birth), and they were ovariectomized and treated with estradiol in adulthood (EB50, EB100, and control female groups). Male rats

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Tsukahara, S., Kanaya, M., & Yamanouchi, K. (2014). Neuroanatomy and sex differences of the lordosis-inhibiting system in the lateral septum. Frontiers in Neuroscience. Frontiers Research Foundation. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2014.00299

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