Hormones and behavior
-
Hormones and behavior · Dec 1993
Treatment with an anabolic-androgenic steroid affects anxiety-related behavior and alters the sensitivity of cortical GABAA receptors in the rat.
The putative psychotropic effect of the anabolic-androgenic steroid, testosterone propionate (TP), was determined in intact adult male rats after 1 or 2 weeks of continued exposure via subcutaneously implanted capsules. Behavior was assessed in a novel open-field arena and in the elevated plus-maze. In addition, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-stimulated 36chloride (Cl-) influx was determined in cerebral cortical synaptoneurosomes as a function of TP exposure. ⋯ Thus, 1 week of treatment with TP resulted in anxiolytic behavior that was accompanied by an increase in the sensitivity of cortical GABAA receptors. However, the behavioral and neurochemical changes were no longer present after 2 weeks of TP exposure. These results are discussed in terms of the agonist effects of reduced androgen metabolites at the GABAA receptor and the possible development of tolerance to these effects.