Estrogens dynamically regulate neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus of adult female rats

Author:

Yagi Shunya12,Mohammad Ahmad3,Wen Yanhua2,Batallán Burrowes Ariel A.3,Blankers Samantha A.14,Galea Liisa A. M.1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program in Neuroscience University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

2. Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

3. Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Toronto Ontario Canada

4. Department of Psychiatry University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractEstrone and estradiol differentially modulate neuroplasticity and cognition. How they influence the maturation of new neurons in the adult hippocampus, however, is not known. The present study assessed the effects of estrone and estradiol on the maturation timeline of neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus (DG) of ovariectomized (a model of surgical menopause) young adult Sprague–Dawley rats using daily subcutaneous injections of 17β‐estradiol, estrone or vehicle. Rats were injected with a DNA synthesis marker, 5‐bromo‐2‐deoxyuridine (BrdU), and were perfused 1, 2, or 3 weeks after BrdU injection and daily hormone treatment. Brains were sectioned and processed for various markers including: sex‐determining region Y‐box 2 (Sox2), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), antigen kiel 67 (Ki67), doublecortin (DCX), and neuronal nuclei (NeuN). Immunofluorescent labeling or co‐labelling of BrdU with Sox2 (progenitor cells), Sox2/GFAP (neural progenitor cells), Ki67 (cell proliferation), DCX (immature neurons), NeuN (mature neurons) was used to examine the trajectory and maturation of adult‐born neurons over time. Estrogens had early (1 week of exposure) effects on different stages of neurogenesis (neural progenitor cells, cell proliferation and early maturation of new cells into neurons) but these effects were less pronounced after prolonged treatment. Estradiol enhanced, whereas estrone reduced cell proliferation after 1 week but not after longer exposure to either estrogen. Both estrogens increased the density of immature neurons (BrdU/DCX‐ir) after 1 week of exposure compared to vehicle treatment but this increased density was not sustained over longer durations of treatments to estrogens, suggesting that the enhancing effects of estrogens on neurogenesis were short‐lived. Longer duration post‐ovariectomy, without treatments with either of the estrogens, was associated with reduced neural progenitor cells in the DG. These results demonstrate that estrogens modulate several aspects of adult hippocampal neurogenesis differently in the short term, but may lose their ability to influence neurogenesis after long‐term exposure. These findings have potential implications for treatments involving estrogens after surgical menopause.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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