Abstract :
Uterine sympathetic innervation undergoes profound remodelling in response to physiological and experimental
changes in the circulating levels of sex hormones. It is not known, however, whether this plasticity results from
changes in the innervating neurons, the neuritogenic properties of the target tissue or both. Using densitometric
immunohistochemistry, we analysed the effects of prepubertal chronic oestrogen treatment (three subcutaneous
injections of 20
μ
g of
β
-oestradiol 17-cypionate on days 25, 27 and 29 after birth), natural peripubertal transition
and late pregnancy (19-20 days post coitum) on the levels of TrkA and p75 nerve growth factor receptors in
uterine-projecting sympathetic neurons of the thoraco-lumbar paravertebral sympathetic chain (T7-L2) identified
using the retrograde tracer Fluorogold. For comparative purposes, levels of TrkA and p75 were assessed in the superior
cervical ganglion (SCG) following prepubertal chronic oestrogen treatment. These studies showed that the vast
majority of uterine-projecting neurons expressed both TrkA and p75. Both prepubertal chronic oestrogen treatment
and the peripubertal transition increased the ratio p75 to TrkA in uterine-projecting neurons, whereas pregnancy
elicited the opposite effect. Prepubertal chronic oestrogen treatment had no effects on levels of TrkA or p75 in
sympathetic neurons of the SCG. Taken together, our data suggest that neurotrophin receptor-mediated events
may contribute to regulate sex hormone-induced plasticity in uterine sympathetic nerves, and are in line with the
idea that,
in vivo
, plasticity in uterine nerves involves changes in both the target and the innervating neurons
Keywords :
Neurotrophins , oestrogen , pregnancy , puberty