1. Puberty Blocker, Leuprolide, Reduces Sex Differences in Rough-and-Tumble Play and Anxiety-like Behavior in Juvenile Rats.
- Author
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Oliveira GF, Nguyen AT, Carreras-Simons L, Niepsuj T, Gadelhak SH, Johnson AK, Abdalla A, Lev E, Torres Román SG, Fuchs SN, Jorgensen JS, Farhat WA, and Auger AP
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Female, Rats, Sex Characteristics, Amygdala drug effects, Amygdala metabolism, Corticosterone blood, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Testosterone blood, Leuprolide pharmacology, Anxiety drug therapy, Behavior, Animal drug effects, Sexual Maturation drug effects
- Abstract
We examined the effect of the puberty blocker, leuprolide acetate, on sex differences in juvenile rough-and-tumble play behavior and anxiety-like behavior in adolescent male and female rats. We also evaluated leuprolide treatment on gonadal and pituitary hormone levels and activity-regulated cytoskeleton-protein messenger RNA levels within the adolescent amygdala, a region important both for rough-and-tumble play and anxiety-like behavior. Our findings suggest that leuprolide treatment lowered anxiety-like behavior during adolescent development, suggesting that the maturation of gonadotropin-releasing hormone systems may be linked to increased anxiety. These data provide a potential new model to understand the emergence of increased anxiety triggered around puberty. Leuprolide also reduced masculinized levels of rough-and-tumble play behavior, lowered follicle-stimulating hormone, and produced a consistent pattern of reducing or halting sex differences of hormone levels, including testosterone, growth hormone, thyrotropin, and corticosterone levels. Therefore, leuprolide treatment not only pauses sexual development of peripheral tissues, but also reduces sex differences in hormones, brain, and behavior, allowing for better harmonization of these systems following gender-affirming hormone treatment. These data contribute to the intended use of puberty blockers in stopping sex differences from developing further with the potential benefit of lowering anxiety-like behavior., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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