Adapted Technological Platform for Screening and Identifying Compounds Capable of In vivo Spinal Network-mediated Reflex Ejaculation in Non-anesthetized, Chronic Paraplegic Mice: Evidence of Clonidine-elicited Seminal Emission

Inge Steuer

Laval University Medical Center (CHU de Québec – CHUL), 2705 Laurier Boulevard, RC-9800 (Neuroscience), Québec City, QC, G1V 4G2, Canada.

Pascal Rouleau

Laval University Medical Center (CHU de Québec – CHUL), 2705 Laurier Boulevard, RC-9800 (Neuroscience), Québec City, QC, G1V 4G2, Canada

Pierre A. Guertin *

Laval University Medical Center (CHU de Québec – CHUL), 2705 Laurier Boulevard, RC-9800 (Neuroscience), Québec City, QC, G1V 4G2, Canada and Department of Psychiatry and Neurosciences, Laval University, Pavillon Vandry, Bureau 4873, Québec (Québec), G1V 0A6, Canada

*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.


Abstract

Several drugs have been shown to facilitate locomotor rhythmogenesis and treadmill training after Spinal Cord Injury (SCI). Clonidine, an alpha-adrenoceptor agonist, is of particular interest given its well-known effects on facilitation of reflex-induced spinal stepping in acute or chronic complete low-thoracic spinal cord-transected (Tx) cats. Since locomotion and ejaculation are controlled by neuronal networks located in the same area of the spinal cord (i.e., upper- to mid-lumbar segments), we hypothesized that clonidine may have comparable effects on reflex ejaculation in low-thoracic Tx animals. To achieve that, the main aim was to adapt a technological platform developed initially for in vivo testing of pro-locomotor compounds in order to establish and validate an approach for assessing both behaviourally and quantitatively, drug-induced reflex ejaculation ex copula in an animal model of SCI. At 6 or 7 days post-Tx, male mice received a single injection of clonidine (0.005-2.5 mg/kg, i.p.). At doses ranging between 0.1 and 2.5 mg/kg, clonidine acutely induced, in 88% of cases (35/40 mice), seminal emissions as fluids or plugs (in-urethra) with no erection nor expulsion. Given that clonidine is a partial alpha-2 agonist, the results suggest that alpha-2 adrenoceptor activation is associated with seminal emission in non-copulating and non-stimulated (e.g., manually or electrically) chronic paraplegic mice. To our knowledge, this is the first report of alpha-2-mediated, clonidine-induced seminal emission.

Keywords: Paraplegia, spinal cord injury, transection, reproduction, anejaculation, rodents, mice


How to Cite

Steuer, Inge, Pascal Rouleau, and Pierre A. Guertin. 2015. “Adapted Technological Platform for Screening and Identifying Compounds Capable of In Vivo Spinal Network-Mediated Reflex Ejaculation in Non-Anesthetized, Chronic Paraplegic Mice: Evidence of Clonidine-Elicited Seminal Emission”. Journal of Advances in Medicine and Medical Research 12 (2):1-7. https://doi.org/10.9734/BJMMR/2016/19057.

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