Abstract
Two experiments were done to compare the effects of neonatal exposure to testosterone and its major metabolites, dihydrotestosterone (DHT) and estradiol (E 2), on the development of sex differences in open-field behavior in the rat. In Experiment 1 female rats administered either testosterone propionate (TP), DHT, or estradiol benzoate (EB) were found as adults to have low activity scores, more typical of adult males, when compared to the high scores of oil-treated females. In Experiment 2 the adult open-field behavior of female rats treated neonatally with testosterone or the metabolites was compared to that of male rats treated from Day 1 to 10 of life with the aromatizing enzyme inhibitor, androst-1,4,6-triene-3,17-dione (ATD). These same animals were later tested for lordotic behavior after gonadectomy and priming with EB and progesterone. All male animals and female animals exposed neonatally to testosterone or to either of the metabolites had suppressed open-field activity scores compared to oil-treated females. However, the lordotic behavior of females exposed to DHT and of males exposed to ATD was not defeminized and was comparable to that of oil-treated females. These observations were discussed in terms of a role for the androgenic actions of testosterone in establishing sex differences in nonreproductive behavior in the rat.
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