Abstract

A series of three experiments compared the inhibitory effects of progesterone on estrogen- or androgen-induced sexual behavior in male and female hamsters. In the first experiment chronic progesterone treatment was found to have no effect on male copulatory behavior maintained after castration with testosterone propionate or estradiol benzoate. However, testosterone propionate was more effective at maintaining male behavior than estradiol benzoate. In the second experiment progesterone was found to have a slight inhibitory effect on the rate of the restoration of the intromission response after androgen treatment in males which had been castrated for 8 weeks. In the final experiment, chronic progesterone treatment markedly inhibited sexual receptivity in male and female hamsters which had been given 4 weeks of androgen or estrogen treatment and a single pretest injection of progesterone. Thus, progesterone was shown to be a potent inhibitor of androgen- or estrogen-induced estrus in both male and female hamsters. Due to the large difference in effectiveness on these two behavioral systems, we suggest that progesterone affects steroid-induced male copulatory behavior and female receptivity by different mechanisms of action.

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