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Publication : Lack of functional estrogen receptor beta influences anxiety behavior and serotonin content in female mice.

First Author  Imwalle DB Year  2005
Journal  Physiol Behav Volume  84
Issue  1 Pages  157-63
PubMed ID  15642619 Mgi Jnum  J:101943
Mgi Id  MGI:3605947 Doi  10.1016/j.physbeh.2004.11.002
Citation  Imwalle DB, et al. (2005) Lack of functional estrogen receptor beta influences anxiety behavior and serotonin content in female mice. Physiol Behav 84(1):157-63
abstractText  Estrogen has been linked to the modulation of anxiety in females. Here we report results of anxiety tests conducted in female estrogen receptor beta (ERbeta) knockout (ERbetaKO) and wild-type (WT) mice. Ovariectomized (OVX) mice treated with chronic estradiol (E2) replacement did not behave differently on the elevated plus-maze when compared with OVX mice that did not experience hormone replacement. However, a genotype difference was noted; WT females were more likely to explore the distal portion of the open arm of the maze than ERbetaKO littermates. In addition, ERbetaKO female mice had significantly lower serotonin (5-HT) content than WT littermates in several brain regions including: the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, preoptic area, and hippocampus. A similar trend was noted in the dorsal raphe nucleus. Dopamine content was reduced within the caudate putamen in ERbetaKO mice as compared to brains from WT animals. Thus, in the absence of functional ERbeta, regardless of the presence or absence of circulating E2 in plasma, female mice exhibited enhanced anxiety and decreased concentrations of 5-HT or dopamine in several brain regions. We hypothesize that ERbeta is required during development to modulate the effects of estrogen on anxiety and catecholamine concentrations in female mouse brains.
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