Effects of neonatal RU486 on adult sexual, parental, and fearful behaviors in rats

Exposure to gonadal hormones during perinatal life influences later behavior. The finding that sex differences exist in progestin receptor expression in the perinatal rat brain suggests differential sensitivity of male and female brains to progesterone (C. K. Wagner, A. N. Nakayama, & G. J. De V...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBehavioral neuroscience Vol. 115; no. 1; p. 58
Main Authors Lonstein, J S, Quadros, P S, Wagner, C K
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.02.2001
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Summary:Exposure to gonadal hormones during perinatal life influences later behavior. The finding that sex differences exist in progestin receptor expression in the perinatal rat brain suggests differential sensitivity of male and female brains to progesterone (C. K. Wagner, A. N. Nakayama, & G. J. De Vries, 1998). Because these sex differences are in neural sites that influence sexually differentiated sexual, parental, and fearful behaviors in adults, this study examined the effects of administering the progestin receptor antagonist RU486 for the first 10 days after birth on these behaviors in adulthood. Neonatal RU486 significantly reduced sexual behavior in males but did not impair reproduction in females. Neonatal RU486 did not affect parental responses of virgin rats exposed to pups (sensitization) but reduced fear in the elevated plus-maze in both sexes. Treatment of pups with RU486 affected neither mother-litter interactions nor plasma testosterone levels in males during or after treatment. These results suggest that neonatal exposure to progesterone, in addition to androgens and estrogens, influences behavioral development in rats.
ISSN:0735-7044
DOI:10.1037/0735-7044.115.1.58