Relationship between sexual behavior and sexually dimorphic structures in the anterior hypothalamus in control and prenatally stressed male rats

Citation
Rw. Rhees et al., Relationship between sexual behavior and sexually dimorphic structures in the anterior hypothalamus in control and prenatally stressed male rats, BRAIN RES B, 50(3), 1999, pp. 193-199
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
BRAIN RESEARCH BULLETIN
ISSN journal
03619230 → ACNP
Volume
50
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
193 - 199
Database
ISI
SICI code
0361-9230(199910)50:3<193:RBSBAS>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
The present study was designed to examine the effects of prenatal stress on the morphological development of sexually dimorphic structures in the ante rior hypothalamus in male rats and to determine if there is a relationship between morphologic development of the brain and copulatory behavior in ind ividual animals. Dams in the stress group were subjected to treatments of h eat-light restraint during the third trimester of gestation (day 14 to part urition) three times daily for 45-min periods. At 90 days of age, prenatall y stressed and control male offspring were tested during the dark cycle for spontaneous male sexual behavior. Volumes of the sexually dimorphic nucleu s of the preoptic area (SDN-POA) and the anteroventral periventricular nucl eus (AVPV) were measured. Comparisons were made between copulatory behavior and hypothalamic nuclear volumes. SDN-POA volumes were significantly reduc ed (feminized; males have a larger SDN-POA than females) in prenatally stre ssed males that did not copulate, whereas, SDN-POA volumes in prenatally st ressed males that copulated were not altered. The few control males that di d not copulate (sexually non-active) also had significantly reduced SDN-POA volumes compared to the control males that did copulate (sexually active). The volume of the AVPV was significantly increased (feminized; males have a smaller AVPV than females) in prenatally stressed males that were sexuall y non-active compared to AVPV volumes in sexually active males. The results obtained in this study provide a strong positive relationship between sexu al behavior and the morphology of the two sexually dimorphic structures mea sured. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Inc.