Abstract

The striatal brain regions, including the caudate-putamen, nucleus accumbens core, and nucleus accumbens shell, mediate critical behavioral functions. These functions include but are not limited to motivated behavior, reward, learning, and sensorimotor function in both pathological and normal contexts. The phenotype and/or incidence of all of these behaviors either differ by sex or are sensitive to the presence of gonadal hormones such as 17β-estradiol and testosterone. All three striatal brain regions express membrane-associated estrogen receptors. Here we present a brief review of the recent literature reporting on sex differences and effects of the estrogenic hormone 17β-estradiol on behavioral and neural function across all three striatal regions, focusing upon the most prominent striatal neuron type, the medium spiny neuron. We emphasize recent findings in three broad domains: (1) select striatal-relevant behaviors and disorders, (2) striatal medium spiny neuron dendritic spine density, and (3), striatal medium spiny neuron electrophysiological properties including excitatory synaptic input and intrinsic cellular excitability. These recent advances in behavior, neuroanatomy, and electrophysiology collectively offer insight into the effects of sex and estrogen on striatal function, especially at the level of individual neurons.

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