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Endocrinology, Vol 110, 677-679, Copyright © 1982 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Inhibition of lordosis behavior in the female rat by intraventricular infusion of prolactin and by chronic hyperprolactinemia

CA Dudley, TS Jamison and RL Moss

The role of prolactin (PRL) in the control of the lordosis reflex of female rats was investigated. In the initial series of experiments, the normal high level of sexual receptivity observed in the ovariectomized, estrogen-progesterone (E-P) primed female rat was suppressed by intraventricular infusion of 100 ng PRL. Mating behavior remained suppressed 2, 3, and 5 hours following a single infusion of PRL into the third ventricle. In contrast, infusions of either an equal volume of the solvent vehicle (saline) or 100 ng of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) were ineffective in modulating the level of mating behavior in hormone-primed female rats. In a second series of experiments, chronic hyperprolactinemia was induced by pituitary transplants under the renal capsule in intact, normal cycle diestrus rats (N=12). A significant decrement in E-P induced mating behavior was observed at 12 and 14 weeks posttransplantation but not at 4 weeks. Sham-operated animals (N=12) displayed the characteristic pattern of behavior normally observed under exogenous E-P therapy. In summary, transient exposure as well as chronic exposure to high levels of PRL can suppress mating behavior, thus suggesting a possible role for PRL in the mediation of reproductive behavior in the female rat.


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