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Chapter 17 Sex and the Brain

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2. Female montane vole brain resembles prairie vole receptors during child rearing ... 8. Giving vasopressin or oxytocin to montane voles does not affect behavior ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 17 Sex and the Brain


1
Chapter 17 Sex and the Brain
http//alpha.cc.tut.fi/henri/brains.html
2
I. Introduction to Reproductive System
  • Review pp 548-560

3
II. Voles
  • A. Prairie voles (17.9)
  • 1. Intense mating period
  • 2. Permanent mate
  • 3. Shared care of young

http//204.202.137.115/sections/science/DailyNews/
lovechem0212.html
4
II. Voles
  • B. Montane voles
  • 1. Live singly
  • 2. Promiscuis
  • 3. Only female cares for young and only for
    minimal amount of time

http//www.science-frontiers.com/sf099/sf099b08.ht
m
5
II. Voles
  • C. Oxytocin and vasopressin (17.10color)
  • 1. Receptor distribution varies between voles
  • cause-effect?
  • http//exn.ca/news/images/19990208-eceptorbig.gif

6
II. Voles
  • C. Oxytocin and vasopressin
  • 2. Female montane vole brain resembles prairie
    vole receptors during child rearing
  • 3. When prairie voles mate
  • a. incr vasopressin in males
  • b. incr oxytocin in females

7
II. Voles (prairie)
  • C. Oxytocin and vasopressin
  • 4. If vasopressin antagonist given just before
    mating, male does not form a long term
    relationship
  • 5. If male is given vasopressin when first
    exposed to a female, he forms a strong preference
    for her
  • 6. Similarly, oxytocin is necessary for
    females to form long term relationship

8
II. Voles (prairie)
  • C. Oxytocin and vasopressin
  • 7. During child rearing
  • a. vasopressin incr males fathering role
  • b. oxytocin incr females mothering role
  • 8. Giving vasopressin or oxytocin to montane
    voles does not affect behavior
  • a. perhaps receptors not present or
    distribution is different
  • cause-effect?

9
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • A. Controvery (human brains)
  • 1. Measurement techniques (17.12)
  • 2. Sampling
  • 3. Significance
  • 4. Individual variation
  • 5. Replication
  • 6. Nature vs. nurture
  • SDN male 5x vs. female

10
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • 1. Membrane bound responses
  • a. rapid
  • b. effects
  • 1) membrane potential
  • 2) transmitter receptor
  • 3) transmitter release

11
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • 2. Intracytoplasmic receptors
  • a. slower change
  • b. longer lasting change
  • c. e.g., promote/inhibit transcription
  • d. analagous to NT receptors

12
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • 3. Effects of age
  • a. organizational effects
  • 1) during development
  • 2) long term
  • 3) trigger development of male/female
    gonads
  • 4) brain areas (?)

13
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • b. activational effects
  • 1) after development/puberty
  • 2) temporary
  • 3) triggers behavior
  • c. nature vs. nurture

14
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • 4. Estrogen and excitability
  • a. female rats hippocampal dendritic
    spines cycle with estrous cycle (plasticity)
  • b. directly proportional (17.15)
  • c. control maintain low estrogen,
    administer estrogen, count spines

15
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
Rat
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • d. hippocampus more excitable with incr
    dendritic spines (17.16)
  • e. incr spines directly proportional with
    excitatory synapses
  • f. incr spines directly proportional with
    incr NMDA receptors (excitatory)

16
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • g. mechanism (?)
  • 1) estradiol receptor in inhibitory
    neurons
  • 2) estradiol causes decr GABA
  • 3) causes decr inhibition
  • 4) causes incr neuronal activity
  • 5) somehow causes incr dendritic spines
    Hebbian synapses?, plasticity?

17
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • B. Sex Hormones / Steroids and the Brain
  • h. epilepsy
  • 1) females with certain forms of
    epilepsy are more likely to have seizures during
    stage of menstrual ccle with highest ratio of
    estrogen/progesterone
  • 2) video-Sandy Craddock violence and
    menstrual cycle, epilepsy and violence. 4min

18
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • C. Sexual Orientation (S. LeVay)
  • 1. Interstitial nucleus of the anterior
    hypothalamus (INAH)
  • a. INAH-3 2x males vs females
  • b. INAH-3 gay males vs females
  • c. INAH-3 2x straight males vs gay males
    (17.17)
  • Simon LeVay 1991

19
II. Sexual Dimorphisms
  • C. Sexual Orientation
  • 2. Nature vs nurture (is dimorphism present
    during development?)
  • 3. Twin studies show lt 100 share sexual
    orientation
  • 4. Few replications
  • 5. Sampling?
  • Related to Dorner study (stress?homosexuality)
    ?

20
Think About
  • Brain
  • Body
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