Abstract

Two experiments were performed with ovariectomized female rats in an attempt to determine whether estradiol and dihydrotestosterone work synergistically in the brain to activate mounting behavior. In Expt 1, performed in Göteborg, it was found that females treated daily with 2 μg estradiol benzoate (EB) combined with 500 μg dihydrotestosterone (DHT) displayed significantly more mounts with pelvic thrusting than other females treated with the oil vehicle, 500 μg DHT, or 2 μg EB. The behavior of rats receiving EB + DHT was indistinguishable from that of yet another group of females which received 200 μg testosterone propionate (TP). In Expt 2, performed in Rotterdam, it was found that ovariectomized female rats treated with either 200 μg TP or 2 μg EB + 200 μg dihydrotestosterone propionate (DHTP) mounted significantly more than females treated with 2 μg EB. Both clitoral size and the growth of cornified papillae on the glans clitoris were stimulated by the administration of TP or EB + DHTP. However, in no group was the frequency of mounting affected by anesthetization of the clitoris and external vagina with lidocaine paste. Lordosis quotients of females treated with EB + DHTP were significantly lower than in rats receiving either EB or TP, again regardless of whether or not the genital region was anesthetized. It is concluded that the effects of DHT on estradiol-induced mounting and receptivity most likely result from the action of this androgen on the brain, and not from the stimulatory effect which DHT may exert on genital sensory receptors.

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