Neuroendocrine modulation and repercussions of female reproductive aging.

P. Wise, Matthew J. Smith, D. Dubal, M. Wilson, S. Rau, Adrienne B. Cashion, M. Böttner, K. Rosewell
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引用次数: 109

Abstract

The menopause marks the end of a woman's reproductive life. During the postmenopausal period, plasma estrogen concentrations decrease dramatically and remain low for the rest of her life, unless she chooses to take hormone replacement therapy. During the past 20 years, we have learned that changes in the central nervous system are associated with and may influence the timing of the menopause in women. Recently, it has become clear that estrogens act on more than just the hypothalamus, pituitary, ovary, and other reproductive organs. In fact, they play roles in a wide variety of nonreproductive functions. With the increasing life span of humans from approximately 50 to 80 years and the relatively fixed age of the menopause, a larger number of women will spend over one third of their lives in the postmenopausal state. It is not surprising that interest has increased in factors that govern the timing of the menopause and the repercussions of the lack of estrogen on multiple aspects of women's health. We have used animal models to better understand the complex interactions between the ovary and the brain that lead to the menopause and the repercussions of the hypoestrogenic state. Our results show that when rats reach middle age, the patterns and synchrony of multiple neurochemical events that are critical to the preovulatory gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) surge undergo subtle changes. The precision of rhythmic pattern of neurotransmitter dynamics depends on the presence of estradiol. Responsiveness to this hormone decreases in middle-aged rats. The lack of precision in the coordination in the output of neural signals leads to a delay and attenuation of the luteinizing hormone surge, which lead to irregular estrous cyclicity and, ultimately, to the cessation of reproductive cycles. We also have examined the impact of the lack of estrogen on the vulnerability of the brain to injury. Our work establishes that the absence of estradiol increases the extent of cell death after stroke-like injury and that treatment with low physiological levels of estradiol are profoundly neuroprotective. We have begun to explore the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie this novel nonreproductive action of estrogens. In summary, our studies show that age-related changes in the ability of estradiol to coordinate the neuroendocrine events that lead to regular preovulatory GnRH surges contribute to the onset of irregular estrous cycles and eventually to acyclicity. Furthermore, we have shown that the lack of estradiol increases the vulnerability of the brain to injury and neurodegeneration.
女性生殖衰老的神经内分泌调节和影响。
更年期标志着女性生殖生命的结束。在绝经后,血浆雌激素浓度急剧下降,并在她的余生中保持低水平,除非她选择接受激素替代疗法。在过去的20年里,我们已经了解到中枢神经系统的变化与妇女更年期的时间有关,并可能影响更年期的时间。最近,人们发现雌激素不仅仅作用于下丘脑、垂体、卵巢和其他生殖器官。事实上,它们在各种各样的非生殖功能中发挥着作用。随着人类寿命从大约50岁增加到80岁,以及更年期的年龄相对固定,更多的女性将在绝经后度过三分之一以上的生命。毫不奇怪,人们对决定绝经时间的因素以及缺乏雌激素对妇女健康多方面的影响越来越感兴趣。我们使用动物模型来更好地理解卵巢和大脑之间复杂的相互作用,这些相互作用导致更年期和低雌激素状态的影响。我们的研究结果表明,当大鼠进入中年时,对排卵前促性腺激素释放激素(GnRH)激增至关重要的多种神经化学事件的模式和同步性发生了微妙的变化。神经递质动力学节律模式的准确性取决于雌二醇的存在。中年老鼠对这种激素的反应会减弱。神经信号输出缺乏精确的协调导致黄体生成素激增的延迟和衰减,从而导致不规律的发情周期,最终导致生殖周期停止。我们还研究了缺乏雌激素对大脑损伤脆弱性的影响。我们的研究表明,缺乏雌二醇会增加中风样损伤后细胞死亡的程度,而低生理水平的雌二醇治疗具有深远的神经保护作用。我们已经开始探索这种新的雌激素非生殖作用的细胞和分子机制。总之,我们的研究表明,与年龄相关的雌二醇协调神经内分泌事件的能力变化,导致有规律的排卵前GnRH激增,从而导致不规则的排卵周期,最终导致无周期。此外,我们已经证明,缺乏雌二醇会增加大脑对损伤和神经变性的脆弱性。
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