Abstract

Most studies agree that males and females respond differently to drugs of abuse. In females, estradiol enhances the behavioral response to cocaine. However, studies on the role of testosterone and the locomotor response to psychostimulants in the male rat are inconclusive. Our study was designed to determine the behavioral effects of testosterone on the development and persistence of cocaine sensitization in male rats. We tested different doses of cocaine (10, 15 and 30mg/kg) to determine which dose induced locomotor sensitization in intact (INT) and gonadectomized (GDX) animals. We also investigated if GDX males with testosterone replacement (GDX-T) showed a similar locomotor response to cocaine as INT males. Our data showed that gonadectomy enhanced the locomotor response to a single cocaine injection. This effect was not observed in gonadectomized rats that received testosterone replacement. However, GDX rats did not show a progressive increase in their locomotor response to repeated cocaine administration (15 and 30mg/kg) (sensitization) as did INT and GDX-T animals. It is possible that in GDX males, the initial high locomotor response to cocaine creates a ceiling effect that limits further increase in cocaine-induced hyperactivity. These findings indicate that testosterone not only modulates the behavioral response to a single and to repeated cocaine injections, but is also essential for male rats to become sensitized to cocaine.

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