Abstract
A female rat will display a repertoire of behaviors during a sexual encounter with a male rat including sexually receptive (the lordosis response) and proceptive (hopping, darting) behaviors. In addition, when given the opportunity, a sexually receptive female rat will approach and withdraw from the male rat, controlling the timing of the receipt of mounts, intromissions, and ejaculations, a behavior known as paced mating behavior. The present experiments tested the hypotheses (1) that progesterone regulates paced mating behavior, and (2) that multiple hormone regimens used previously to induce sexual receptivity have the same effect on paced mating behavior. Paced mating behavior was assessed in sexually receptive ovariectomized female rats after treatment with: (1) estradiol benzoate (EB; 30.0 mg/kg) followed by a range of doses of progesterone (P; 1.0–8.0 mg/kg), (2) two pulses of unesterified estradiol (E2; 2.0 μg/rat) followed by 1.0 mg/rat of P, and (3) EB alone (5.0 μg/rat) for 6 days. No differences in sexual receptivity or in paced mating behavior were observed across doses of P (1.0–8.0 mg/kg). In contrast, the number of hops and darts per min increased with the dose of P administered. E2+ P administration resulted in slightly, but significantly, lower levels of sexual receptivity along with significantly longer contact-return latencies following an intromission in relation to the other treatment conditions. In addition, female rats exhibited fewer hops and darts per min in response to E2+ P than in response to EB + 8.0 mg/kg of P. The administration of EB alone for 6 days induced levels of receptivity and paced mating behavior indistinguishable from EB + P, while eliciting significantly fewer hops and darts per min than the EB + 8.0 mg/kg P treatment condition. Hormone priming regimen had no effect on the percentage of exits displayed during the paced mating tests in any experimental phase. Dose of P had no effect on paced mating behavior in sexually receptive rats. In addition, P does not appear to be necessary for the display of paced mating behavior following long-term treatment with EB. In contrast, the pulsatile administration of E2+ P induced a different pattern of paced mating behavior in sexually receptive rats.
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