Litcius/Paper detail

Rapid changes in brain estrogen concentration during male sexual behavior are site and stimulus specific

Marie-Pierre de Bournonville, Catherine de Bournonville, Laura Vandries, Gwenaël Nys, Marianne Fillet, Gregory F. Ball, Jacques Balthazart, Charlotte A. Cornil

2021Scientific Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Classically, estrogens regulate male sexual behavior through effects initiated in the nucleus. However, neuroestrogens, i.e., estrogens locally produced in the brain, can act within minutes via membrane-initiated events. In male quail, rapid changes in brain aromatase activity occur after exposure to sexual stimuli. We report here that local extracellular estrogen concentrations measured by in vivo microdialysis increase during sexual interactions in a brain site- and stimulus-specific manner. Indeed, estrogen concentrations rose within 10 min of the initiation of sexual interaction with a female in the medial preoptic nucleus only, while visual access to a female led to an increase in estrogen concentrations only in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. These are the fastest fluctuations in local estrogen concentrations ever observed in the vertebrate brain. Their site and stimulus specificity strongly confirm the neuromodulatory function of neuroestrogens on behavior.

Topics & Concepts

Stria terminalisMicrodialysisEstrogenInternal medicineEndocrinologyNucleusPreoptic areaQuailBiologyAromataseStimulus (psychology)NeuroscienceHypothalamusCentral nervous systemMedicinePsychologyPsychotherapistCancerBreast cancerHypothalamic control of reproductive hormonesEstrogen and related hormone effectsAnimal Behavior and Reproduction