Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9415760 Brain Research 2005 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
The adult mammary nerves (MNs) from female, male, and testosterone-androgenized female rats were studied by light and electron microscopy. The female MNs trunk has twice the diameter of that of the male. Morphometry showed a significantly more myelinated (307 ± 6) and unmyelinated axons (1654 ± 10) in the female MN than the male MN (278 ± 6 and 1373 ± 28, respectively). Perinatal exposure of the female to testosterone significantly reduced the number of both axon types in the MN in adulthood (244 ± 6 myelinated and 1300 ± 32, unmyelinated). Another sexual dimorphism is a distinct group of large (>7.0 μm in diameter) myelinated axons known to conduct sensory information (i.e., touch and vibration). Because the male and the perinatally-androgenized female MNs lack these fibers, it is concluded that gonadal sex hormones may promote the differentiation of specific sets of axons committed to transmission of sensory cues relevant to reproduction.
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