A role for the melanocortin 4 receptor in sexual function

Lex H.T. Van der Ploeg(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), William J. Martin(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Andrew D. Howard(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ravi P. Nargund(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Christopher P. Austin(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Xiao-Ming Guan(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Jennifer E. Drisko(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Doreen E. Cashen(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Iyassu K. Sebhat(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Arthur A. Patchett(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), David J. Figueroa(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Anthony G. DiLella(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Brett Connolly(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), David H. Weinberg(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Carina P. Tan(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Oksana Palyha(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Sheng‐Shung Pong(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Tanya MacNeil(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Charles Rosenblum(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Aurawan Vongs(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Rui Tang(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Hong Yu(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Andreas W. Sailer(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Tung M. Fong(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Cathy Huang(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Michael R. Tota(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ray Chang(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ralph A. Stearns(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Constantin Tamvakopoulos(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), George J. Christ(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Deborah L. Drazen(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Brian D. Spar(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Randy J. Nelson(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), D. Euan MacIntyre(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 9, 2002
Cited by 299

Abstract

By using a combination of genetic, pharmacological, and anatomical approaches, we show that the melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R), implicated in the control of food intake and energy expenditure, also modulates erectile function and sexual behavior. Evidence supporting this notion is based on several findings: (i) a highly selective non-peptide MC4R agonist augments erectile activity initiated by electrical stimulation of the cavernous nerve in wild-type but not Mc4r-null mice; (ii) copulatory behavior is enhanced by administration of a selective MC4R agonist and is diminished in mice lacking Mc4r; (iii) reverse transcription (RT)-PCR and non-PCR based methods demonstrate MC4R expression in rat and human penis, and rat spinal cord, hypothalamus, brainstem, pelvic ganglion (major autonomic relay center to the penis), but not in rat primary corpus smooth muscle cavernosum cells; and (iv) in situ hybridization of glans tissue from the human and rat penis reveal MC4R expression in nerve fibers and mechanoreceptors in the glans of the penis. Collectively, these data implicate the MC4R in the modulation of penile erectile function and provide evidence that MC4R-mediated proerectile responses may be activated through neuronal circuitry in spinal cord erectile centers and somatosensory afferent nerve terminals of the penis. Our results provide a basis for the existence of MC4R-controlled neuronal pathways that control sexual function.


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