Elevated Aromatase Activity in Forebrain Synaptic Terminals During Song

2009 
The enzyme aromatase, which converts androgens into oestrogens, is expressed throughout the brain in zebra finches. Aromatase is enzymatically active in both cell bodies and synaptic terminals of neurones of the songbird brain, particularly within the forebrain motor and auditory networks. Aromatisation within synaptic terminals could thus provide localised and acute modulatory oestrogens within the forebrain during singing and ⁄ or audition. In male zebra finches, we tested the hypothesis that forebrain aromatase activity is elevated during singing behaviour and ⁄ or hearing male song. The present study reports that aromatase activity is elevated in males that were singing for 30 min compared to nonsinging males, and that this elevation occurs only within the cellular compartment that contains synaptic terminals. In a separate experiment, males that heard acoustic playback of song for 30 min exhibited no differences in aromatase activity or in aromatase mRNA levels, as revealed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis. Therefore, these results indicate that activation of the motor pathway for song production is linked to local elevations in synaptic aromatase activity within the forebrain of male zebra finches. Future experiments could assess whether elevated synaptic aromatase activity during song is dependent on acute regulation of the aromatase protein.
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