Abstract
The actions of sex steroids in the brain have been shown, from molecular to systems levels, to control reproductive behaviour in a wide range of vertebrates. It has become increasingly clear that gonadal steroid hormones have regulatory functions which extend far beyond the direct coordination of an animal's physiological state and its display of sexual behaviour. While some of these actions may include changes in mood or other behavioural measures, such as exploration or excitability, sex steroid hormones also influence neural plasticity, neuronal activity and, possibly, learning and memory, as reflected by long-term potentiation or age-related deficits. Here we describe two systems that have been used to explore the non-reproductive roles of gonadal steroid hormones. The first of these is to examine the oestrogen-sensitive opioid peptide gene expression in the hypothalamus. Currently, we are attempting to identify the types of behaviour which may be altered consequent to the oestrogenic induction of the preproenkephalin gene. The second approach involves studying the effects of progesterone at the neuronal cell membrane and characterizing the metabolites of progesterone which have benzodiazepine-like actions in the brain. A number of studies suggest that this may provide an alternative mechanism through which progesterone can influence mood or behaviour.
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