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-Estradiol rapidly facilitates chemoinvestigation and
mounting in castrated male rats
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201-3098
Testosterone and estradiol act synergistically to stimulate male
sexual behavior. Previous studies demonstrated that testosterone's actions are mediated genomically. Attempts to show that estradiol acts
in a similar fashion have been inconclusive. However, estrogens have
been shown to exert short-latency effects by acting directly on
neuronal membranes. The present experiment examined whether testosterone or estradiol rapidly facilitates copulatory behaviors in
castrated sexually experienced rats. Within 35 min of administration, estradiol stimulated chemoinvestigation and frequency of mounting and
reduced mount latency in a dose-dependent manner. In contrast, acute
administration of testosterone did not alter sexual activity. These
data demonstrate for the first time that estradiol exerts short-latency
effects on copulatory behavior, providing indirect evidence that this
action is mediated through a nontranscriptional mechanism.
testosterone; copulatory behavior
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M. Taziaux, M. Keller, J. Bakker, and J. Balthazart Sexual Behavior Activity Tracks Rapid Changes in Brain Estrogen Concentrations J. Neurosci., June 13, 2007; 27(24): 6563 - 6572. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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