Abstract

Adult ovariectomized guinea pigs were tested for aggressive behavior during treatments with estradiol benzoate (EB), testosterone propionate (TP), dihydrotestosterone propionate (DHTP), or with DHTP + EB. Aggression was not influenced by EB, but was augmented by all other steroid treatments. DHTP given by itself was not as effective as TP, but was significantly potentiated by the concurrent administration of EB. When tested for mounting behavior, ovariectomized guinea pigs were refractory to DHTP and to DHTP + EB, whereas they mounted when given TP. The findings suggest that the hormone-sensitive neural systems which mediate aggression in female guinea pigs have in part different steroid requirements from those subserving the activation of mounting. In addition, the findings emphasize that DHTP + EB administration does not always duplicate the effects of TP for behavioral endpoints, since DHTP + EB and TP had similar effects on aggression, but quite different effects on mounting in female guinea pigs. These results stand in contrast to those obtained with male guinea pigs, in which DHTP has been reported to be as effective as TP for the activation of mounting. It is hypothesized that both sex-specific and hormone-specific activational phenomena may be genetically regulated by factors separate from those responsible for the establishment of prenatal hormonal conditions.

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