Affiliation:
1. Lung Biology Laboratory, Georgetown University School of Medicine,Washington, District of Columbia 20007, USA.
Abstract
Sexually mature virgin female rats and mice have a higher mass-specific gas-exchange surface area (Sa) and smaller alveoli than same-aged males even though mass-specific oxygen consumption (VO2) is the same, within species, in both sexes (G. D. Massaro, J. P. Mortola, and D. Massaro. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92: 1105-1107, 1995). We now report that rats subjected to ovariectomy at age 21 days had, at age 59 days, a smaller mass-specific Sa and larger alveoli than sham-ovariectomized rats; these differences were not due to differences in VO2 and were prevented by estrogen therapy. Furthermore, sham-ovariectomized rats treated with estrogen had smaller and more alveoli than sham-operated females not given estrogen. Androgenization of newborn female rats did not alter mass-specific Sa or alveolar size. Male mice genetically deficient in androgen receptors had the same mass-specific Sa as normal male littermates. We conclude that estrogen is responsible for the sexual dimorphism of the lung's gas-exchange region and induces the formation of smaller, more numerous alveoli in otherwise untreated female rats.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
50 articles.
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