INTRODUCTION
+1256During the past decade, putative receptor systems for sex steroid hormones have been identifi ed, characterized, and anatomically mapped in the brains and pituitary glands of representative vertebrate species. This information has been obtained by three techniques: (a) steroid autoradiography after in vivo 3H-steroid administration (36,68), and (b) in vitro receptor assays as well as (c) in vivo 3H-steroid administration and cell nuclear isolation, both performed on dissected pieces of brain tissue (54). Neural steroid receptors appear to be similar, if not identical, to receptor systems from nonneural target tissues. Their mode of action, implied by their similarity to peripheral receptors, is presumed to be at the level of gene expression and regulation of genomic activity.Principal interest in these receptors now centers around relating their neuroanatomical location and their occupation by endogenous and exoge nous steroids to neuroendocrine and behavioral effects of the hormones. More broadly speaking, research on steroid hormone action in brain and pituitary is now directed toward finding and describing the hormone initiated chemical and cellular processes that underly these neuroendocrine and behavioral events. The location of steroid receptors is a useful though not infallible guide in deciding where in the brain to look. (Steroid effects may exist that do not involve these receptors. This matter is considered in the Concluding Remarks.) Here I review gonadal steroid metabolism, recep tor localization, and approaches to the study of receptor involvement in brain function. 97 Further ANNUAL REVIEWS 98 McEWEN
RECEPTOR LOCALIZATION IN RELATION TO STEROID METABOLISM
AndrogensReceptors for androgens have been characterized in rat and mouse brain and pituitary tissue (see 55, 58). The specificity of steroid binding and the physicochemical properties (6-7S in low salt and 3-4S in high ionic strength buffer after sucrose density gradient sedimentation) are similar to those of prostate androgen receptors. Androgen receptors are absent in brain and pituitary tissue of rats and mice bearing the X-linked testicular feminizing (Tfm), or androgen insensitivity, mutation (5, 26,71). The neuroanatomical distribution of androgen receptors has been characterized for rats and mice by autoradiography (81,84,85) and by biochemical analysis (8, 15, 43). Androgen receptors, found throughout the brain, are concentrated in pitui tary, hypothalamus (H), septum, preoptic area (P), and amygdala (A). Only one receptor seems able to recognize both testosterone (T) and 5a-dihy drotestosterone (5a-DHT) (27).Two aspects of T metabolism are crucial to receptor occupation: aromati zation to estradiol (44, 72) and .6. 4-5 reduction to 5a-or 5,B-DHT and related androstanediols (55). Sa-reductase activity occurs throughout the rat brain and pituitary and does not seem to be a limiting factor in androgen receptor occupation (cf 22, 44). Aromatization is absent from pituitary and from cerebral cortex and is present in H, P, an...