Effects of Neonatal Testosterone and Progesterone on Open-Field Behaviour in the RAT
Open Access
- 1 February 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
- Vol. 30 (1) , 157-166
- https://doi.org/10.1080/14640747808400664
Abstract
Rats treated on the day of birth with progesterone (50 üg) or testosterone pro-pionate (200 üg) or the oil injection vehicle alone were tested in the open-field on four consectuve days at 45 days and 85 days of age. Averages across treatments showed that females ambulated more and reared more than males at both ages, that they groomed more than males at 45 days of age, and defaecated less at 85 days of age. Progesterone treatment significantly reduced defaecation in males at 45 days of age, and reduced grooming in both sexes. At 85 days of age progesterone significantly increased activity in females. Testosterone-treated animals of both sexes groomed significantly less than same-sex controls at 45 days of age, whereas at 85 days of age activity scores were significantly reduced only in females although testosterone treated males were less active on 2 test days and more active on 1. Early postnatal treatment with progesterone appeared to feminise male rats, and testosterone to masculinise female rats. Both hormones also altered the behaviour of opposite sexed rats, indicating that male rats may be further masculinised by exogenous testosterone and female rats further feminised by progesterone. Progesterone may have acted as an anti-androgenic agent by blocking gonadal and adrenal androgens in males and adrenal androgens in females.This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rodent sex differences in emotional and related behaviorBehavioral Biology, 1975
- Sex differences in open-field behavior in the rat: The inductive and activational role of gonadal hormonesPhysiology & Behavior, 1975
- Neonatal androgen effects on open-field activity and sexual behavior in the female rat: The modifying influence of ovarian secretions during developmentPhysiology & Behavior, 1973
- Mice: Fighting by Neonatally Androgenized FemalesScience, 1968
- Protection Against the Neural Organizing Effect of Exogenous Androgen in the Neonatal Female RatEndocrinology, 1968
- The antiestrogenic and antiandrogenic activities of progesterone in the defense of a normal fetusThe Anatomical Record, 1967
- Progestin‐induced hermaphroditism: IQ and psychosexual identity in a study of ten girls∗∗The Journal of Sex Research, 1967
- FAILURE OF TESTOSTERONE PROPIONATE TO INDUCE THE 'EARLY-ANDROGEN' SYNDROME IN RATS PREVIOUSLY INJECTED WITH PROGESTERONEJournal of Endocrinology, 1965
- UNIT ACTIVITY IN THE HYPOTHALAMUS OF THE CYCLIC FEMALE RAT: EFFECT OF GENITAL STIMULI AND PROGESTERONEJournal of Endocrinology, 1963
- DETERMINANTS OF EMOTIONALITY IN RATBritish Journal of Psychology, 1957