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Publication : Estrogen increases locomotor activity in mice through estrogen receptor alpha: specificity for the type of activity.

First Author  Ogawa S Year  2003
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  144
Issue  1 Pages  230-9
PubMed ID  12488349 Mgi Jnum  J:115540
Mgi Id  MGI:3691908 Doi  10.1210/en.2002-220519
Citation  Ogawa S, et al. (2003) Estrogen increases locomotor activity in mice through estrogen receptor alpha: specificity for the type of activity. Endocrinology 144(1):230-9
abstractText  Estrogens are known to increase running wheel activity of rodents primarily by acting on the medial preoptic area (mPOA). The mechanisms of this estrogenic regulation of running wheel activity are not completely understood. In particular, little is known about the separate roles of two types of estrogen receptors, ERalpha and ERbeta, both of which are expressed in mPOA neurons. In the present study the effects of continuous estrogen treatment on running wheel activity were examined in male and female mice specifically lacking either the ERalpha (alphaERKO) or the ERbeta (betaERKO) gene. Mice were gonadectomized and 1 wk later implanted with either a low dose (16 ng/d) or a high dose (160 ng/d) of estradiol benzoate (EB) or with a placebo control pellet. Home cage running wheel activity was recorded for 9 d starting 10 d after EB implants. The same mice were also tested for open field activity before and after EB implants. In both female and male alphaERKO mice, running wheel activity was not different from that in corresponding wild-type (alphaWT) mice in placebo control groups. In both females and males it was increased by EB only in alphaWT, not alphaERKO, mice. In betaERKO mice, on the other hand, both doses of EB equally increased running wheel activity in both sexes just as they did in betaWT mice. Absolute numbers of daily revolutions of EB-treated groups, however, were significantly lower in betaERKO females compared with betaWT females. Before EB treatment, gonadectomized alphaERKO female were significantly less active than alphaWT mice in open field tests, whereas betaERKO females tended to be more active than betaWT mice. In male mice there were no effect of ERalpha or ERbeta gene knockout on open field activity. Unlike its effect on running wheel activity, EB treatment induced only a small increase in open field activity in female, but not male, mice. These findings indicate that 1) in both sexes estrogenic regulation of running wheel activity is primarily mediated through the ERalpha, not the ERbeta; and 2) hormone/genotype effects are specific to the type of locomotor activity (i.e. home cage running wheel activity and open field activity) measured.
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