Abstract

Stimulation of the vagina and cervix, provided by the male during copulation or manually with a probe, causes many behavioral and endocrine changes associated with female reproduction in rats. Previously, we found that vaginal-cervical stimulation (VCS), by mating or manual probing, increases the expression of Fos-immunoreactivity (Fos-IR) in discrete populations of neurons in the preoptic area, mediobasal hypothalamus and midbrain, suggesting that these neurons respond to VCS. The purpose of the present study was to determine if hormonal priming would increase the number of Fos-IR cells following VCS. Contrary to our hypothesis, in Experiment 1 priming animals with a behaviorally effective dose of 17β-estradiol benzoate followed 48 h later by progesterone caused a trend towards a decrease in the number of VCS-induced Fos-IR cells in the ventromedial hypothalamus. In Experiment 2, which was done to confirm this decrease in VCS-induced Fos-IR neurons by hormones, this effect was found to be statistically significant. Furthermore, this hormone-induced decrease in VCS-responsive cells was localized to the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus, an area rich in estrogen and progestin receptors. No effects of hormone treatment on VCS-induced Fos-IR were observed in any other brain regions analyzed. These findings suggest that steroid hormones may elicit some of their effects on female reproductive behavior and physiology by altering the responsiveness of ventromedial nucleus neurons to vaginal-cervical stimulation.

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