Over the past two decades, the classical understanding of steroid action has been updated to include rapid, membrane-initiated, neurotransmitter-like functions. While steroids were known to function on very short time spans to induce physiological and behavioral changes, the mechanisms by which these changes occur are now becoming more clear. In avian systems, rapid estradiol effects can be mediated via local alterations in aromatase activity, which precisely regulates the temporal and spatial availability of estrogens. Acute regulation of brain-derived estrogens has been shown to rapidly affect sensorimotor function and sexual motivation in birds. In rodents, estrogens and progesterone are critical for reproduction, including preovulatory events and female sexual receptivity. Membrane progesterone receptor as well as classical progesterone receptor trafficked to the membrane mediate reproductive-related hypothalamic physiology, via second messenger systems with dopamine-induced cell signals. In addition to these relatively rapid actions, estrogen membrane-initiated signaling elicits changes in morphology. In the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, these changes are needed for lordosis behavior. Recent evidence also demonstrates that membrane glucocorticoid receptor is present in numerous cell types and species, including mammals. Further, membrane glucocorticoid receptor influences glucocorticoid receptor translocation to the nucleus effecting transcriptional activity. The studies presented here underscore the evidence that steroids behave like neurotransmitters to regulate CNS functions. In the future, we hope to fully characterize steroid receptor-specific functions in the brain.
IntroductionAt one time, the actions of steroid hormones were thought to mediate physiological changes through changes in gene transcription over an extended time course. This incomplete picture of steroid action has been filled in by the additional understanding that these compounds can have rapid, extragenomic, membrane-initiated actions. It has been known for decades that steroid hormones can have acute actions (within minutes) on physiology (Szego and Davis, 1967), the activity of neurons (Kelly et al., 1976), and the expression of behavior (Hayden-Hixson and Ferris, 1991). More recently, data demonstrate that steroids can and do function in ways that are "neurotransmitter-like," as they are synthesized at precise spatial locations within neural circuits and can act within minutes as local neuromodulators to rapidly regulate cognitive functions and behaviors (Balthazart and Ball,