4.5 Article

Effects of chronic tamoxifen treatment in female rat sexual behaviour

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e12362

Keywords

Lordosis; Immunohistochemistry; Estrogen receptor; Progesterone receptor; Wistar rat; Hypothalamus

Funding

  1. Portuguese National Funds through FCT - Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, I.P. [UIDB/4255/2020, LA/P/0053/2020]

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TAM may modulate the hypothalamus by affecting ER- and/or PR-dependent mechanisms, thus influencing female sexual behavior. By altering estrogen and progesterone levels, it changes rat behavior responses and receptor expressions.
The medial preoptic (MPN) and the ventromedial hypothalamic nuclei (VMN) modulate the estrogen receptor (ER)-dependent female sexual behavior, a response that is inhibited by tamoxifen (TAM), a modulator of the steroid receptor activation. With the objective to assess TAM action in the brain areas involved in the modulation sexual cues, an animal model on long-term TAM therapy to intact female rats, was used to mimic the 5-year prophylactic TAM therapy offered to women at higher risk of breast cancer. After three months treatment, female sexual behavior with a stud male rat was evaluated. Upon sacrifice, the brains were removed and the MPN and the ventrolateral division of the VMN were screened for the effects of TAM in the expression of ER alpha, ER beta and progesterone receptor. Results show that TAM inhibited the receptive component of the female sexual behavior. Even though TAM decreased estrogen and progesterone levels to values similar to the ones of estrous and diestrus rats, the biochemical data failed to demonstrate such possible causation for the behavioral response. In fact, TAM administration induced a constant low level of ovarian hormones that changed the pattern of ER and PR expression as well as receptor co-expression in the brain areas regulating the behavioral response, dissimilar to the ones seen in the cycle phases with the same low hormone levels. Nevertheless, present data suggests that by affecting ER- and/or PR-dependent mechanisms, TAM may modulate the hypothalamus, a region known to participate in several social behaviors.

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