Increased Dopamine Receptor Sensitivity After Estrogen Treatment Using the Rat Rotation Model
- 27 June 1980
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 208 (4451) , 1466-1468
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.7189902
Abstract
Estrogen was administered to male rats that had received unilateral injections of 6-hydroxydopamine into the striatum. Following this treatment, their duration of rotation increased in response to amphetamine. Estrogen treatment resulted in a corresponding increase in the number of striatal dopamine receptors. Therefore, both behavioral and biochemical evidence suggests that striatal dopamine function is influenced by peripherally administered estrogens. These results are relevant to the clinical cases of chorea associated with elevated concentrations of estrogen, which occur in pregnancy and during oral contraceptive use.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Modification of postsynaptic dopaminergic sensitivity by female sex hormonesLife Sciences, 1979
- Pituitary Hormones in Brain: Where, How, and Why?Science, 1979
- Rat rotation monitoring for pharmacology researchPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1979
- Dopamine receptors and ergot drugs. Evidence that an ergolene derivative is a differential agonist at subcortical limbic dopamine receptorsBrain Research, 1978
- Turning in MFB-lesioned rats and antagonism of neuroleptic-induced catalepsy after lisuride and LSDLife Sciences, 1978
- Serotonergic component of neuroleptic receptorsNature, 1978
- Biochemical demonstration of dopaminergic receptors in rat and human brain using [3H]spiroperidolBrain Research, 1977
- Body weight and regulatory deficits following unilateral nigrostriatal lesionsBrain Research, 1977
- Dopamine Receptor Binding Enhancement Accompanies Lesion-Induced Behavioral SupersensitivityScience, 1977
- Turning in circles: The neuropharmacology of rotationLife Sciences, 1976