• Front Neuroendocrinol · Apr 2015

    Review

    Transsynaptic trophic effects of steroid hormones in an avian model of adult brain plasticity.

    • Eliot A Brenowitz.
    • Departments of Psychology and Biology, and the Virginia Merrill Bloedel Hearing Research Center, University of Washington, United States. Electronic address: eliotb@u.washington.edu.
    • Front Neuroendocrinol. 2015 Apr 1;37:119-28.

    AbstractThe avian song control system provides an excellent model for studying transsynaptic trophic effects of steroid sex hormones. Seasonal changes in systemic testosterone (T) and its metabolites regulate plasticity of this system. Steroids interact with the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) to influence cellular processes of plasticity in nucleus HVC of adult birds, including the addition of newborn neurons. This interaction may also occur transsynpatically; T increases the synthesis of BDNF in HVC, and BDNF protein is then released by HVC neurons on to postsynaptic cells in nucleus RA where it has trophic effects on activity and morphology. Androgen action on RA neurons increases their activity and this has a retrograde trophic effect on the addition of new neurons to HVC. The functional linkage of sex steroids to BDNF may be of adaptive value in regulating the trophic effects of the neurotrophin and coordinating circuit function in reproductively relevant contexts.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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