Abstract

Twenty-four-day-old weanling male and female rats were either lesioned in the septal area, gonadectomized, lesioned and gonadectomized, or not treated. Tests for lordotic behavior were carried out at 27 and 28 days of age after priming with estradiol alone and with estradiol plus progesterone. A second set of tests for lordotic behavior was carried out at 47 and 48 days of age. In the interim period, some of the animals were given chronic estrogen treatment. In tests given at 27 days of age, septal lesions facilitated lordotic responding after estrogen priming; no differences were observed between male and female animals. At 47 and 48 days of age, however, unless male rats had been exposed to chronic estrogens following septal lesioning, no facilitation of estrogen-induced lordotic behavior occurred. In addition, it was found that female rats gonadectomized at 24 days of age and given no exposure to estrogens between the tests at 27 and 28 days and those at 47 and 48 days of age showed reduced sensitivity to estrogens, as compared to normal or estrogen-treated females, whether lesioned or not.

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