Adult testosterone levels influence the morphology of a sexually dimorphic area in the mongolian gerbil brain

Abstract
This research shows that the medial preoptic area-anterior hypothalamus (MPOA-AH) of the gerbil contains a sexually dimorphic area (SDA) whose morphology is influenced by adult gonadal steroids. The characteristics of the SDA were studied initally in gonadally intact males and females and later in males and females that had been gonadectomized or gonadectomized and given testosterone. Coronal sections through the MPOA-AH were stained with thionin to visualize the SDA. In male gerbils, the SDA is a darkly staining, hook-shaped structure on either side of the third ventricle, above the suprachiasmatic nuclei and below the anterior commissure. Within the male SDA lies a small, dense cluster of cells, the SDA pars compacta (SDApc). In female gerbils, the SDA is more ovoid and diffuse and the SDApc is absent. Camera lucida tracings and planimeter measurements of the SDA showed that the total volume of the SDA is similar in the two sexes, but the proportion of the SDA that stains darkly and/or stands out clearly from the surround (dark volume) is larger in males. Gonadectomy decreases both total and dark volume of the SDA in both sexes and decreases the volume of the SDApc in males. Testosterone treatment prevents these changes. This is the first report of changes in the gross morphology of the mammalian brain after steroid hormone manipulations in adulthood. The changes in the SDA may be related to testosterone activation of scent marking behavior.