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Oxford University Press (OUP), Biology of Reproduction, 5(39), p. 1009-1012

DOI: 10.1095/biolreprod39.5.1009

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Sexual Differentiation of the Luteinizing Hormone Response of Neonatal Rats to the Narcotic Antagonist Naloxone: Critical Role of Estrogen Receptors1

Journal article published in 1988 by O. F. X. Almeida ORCID, R. Schulz
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Administration of the narcotic antagonist naloxone results in an elevation of serum luteinizing hormone (LH) levels in 10-day-old female, but not male, rats. Previous studies from this laboratory indicated a role for neonatal gonadal steroids in the development of this sex-specific response. In this study, the estrogen receptor antagonist OH-Tamoxifen or the androgen-receptor antagonist flutamide were injected on Days 1 or 9 of life, and the LH responses of male and female pups to naloxone were assessed on Day 10. Flutamide did not produce a response different from that seen in vehicle-treated pups, discounting a role for androgen receptors. OH-Tamoxifen on Day 9 caused an increase in basal levels of LH; neither sex showed a response to naloxone. However, OH-Tamoxifen treatment of 1-day-old males resulted in an enhanced release of LH upon challenge with naloxone on Day 10 of life; similar treatment of 1-day-old females resulted in a normal female-type response to the opioid antagonist. These results show that blockade of estrogen receptors in males during the "critical period" of sexual differentiation results in a female phenotypic response to naloxone. Therefore, estrogen receptors play a critical role in the sexual differentiation of the LH response to naloxone in neonatal male rats.