'Cocaine Self-Administration Differentially Modulates the Content of Cholesterol, Progesterone, and Testosterone in the Brain and Plasma of Male Rats' - a Karger #Endocrinology article on #ScienceOpen:

🔎🔗 https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=55335351-e7f3-4e1b-9bc9-a4ebcddaa150

#Neuroendocrinology #Neurosteroids #Cholesterol #CocaineResearch #Neuroscience

Cocaine Self-Administration Differentially Modulates the Content of Cholesterol, Progesterone, and Testosterone in the Brain and Plasma of Male Rats

<p xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" dir="auto" id="d2623134e140"> <b> <i>Introduction:</i> </b> Chronic cocaine exposure results in changes in circulating steroid hormones, which is known to be associated with cocaine-seeking and cocaine-taking behavior. However, whether cocaine also alters the brain content of these steroid hormones and cholesterol, a precursor to all steroid hormones, has yet to be extensively investigated. Thus, the goal of this study was to determine whether cocaine self-administration (SA) altered the content of cholesterol and steroid hormones (progesterone and testosterone) in both the plasma and the brain of animals. <b> <i>Methods:</i> </b> Male Sprague-Dawley rats were allowed to self-administer cocaine (1.5 mg/kg/infusion) for a maximum of 40 injections within 6 h per day for 5 consecutive days followed by cue reactivity test and cocaine SA under the progressive ratio schedule as a measure of motivation to acquire cocaine. Eighteen hours after the last behavior test, the blood and brain tissue, including the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and dorsal striatum (CPu), were collected for biochemical assays. <b> <i>Results:</i> </b> While cocaine SA did not alter the content of cholesterol and progesterone in the plasma, it reduced cholesterol content and almost completely abolished progesterone content in both the PFC and CPu. Further, testosterone levels were reduced in the CPu and plasma. Notably, plasma testosterone was positively correlated with its content in the PFC and CPu. <b> <i>Conclusions:</i> </b> Cholesterol and progesterone in the brain are more sensitive to changes induced by cocaine SA than those in the plasma. Future studies should focus on understanding the functional consequence of altered brain steroids on neurotransmission and cocaine-seeking and cocaine-taking behavior. </p>

ScienceOpen

Zurzuvae, part of emerging class of medications dubbed #Neurosteroids, stimulate a different #Brain pathway than older #Antidepressants that target #Serotonin and appear to have a quicker onset of action in treating #PostPartum #depression. The question will be: 1. Cost and 2. Long term side effects (the study only followed patients for 45 days!)

The IV form of the drug costs $34,000. #Sage Pharmaceuticals has not priced the pill form (but I suspect it will be very costly!)

https://www.npr.org/2023/08/05/1192346297/postpartum-depression-pill-fda

@nadel
"Perhaps now would be a reasonable time to raise questions brought up by the personal histories published so far."

I appreciate the invitation! I'm still thinking about this bit of the Gyuri Buzsaki episode:

"What make the hippocampus special is the granule cell. There is no such cell type in the neocortex. Granule cells keep dividing postnatally and the only cell type known whose life depends on circulating hormones (steroids)."

I've found a few interesting links, including:

Estrogen modulates place learning through estrogen receptors in the hippocampus - Lilia Zurkovsky 2006
(Where they implanted the hormones directly into the rat hippocampus...)

Estrogen Receptors, the Hippocampus, and Memory - Linda A. Bean 2014
(Where they used receptor knockout mice and viral vector delivery of different estrogen receptors to modify the sensitivity to estrogen.)

Do you know of anyone studying this in humans? I guess it would be difficult, since as I (barely and maybe wrongly) understand things, our estradiol level above the blood-brain barrier is higher and poorly correlated with the testable levels circulating below there. And hippocampal E2 is mostly created in the hippocampus itself...

Neurosteroids in Adult Hippocampus of Male and Female Rodents: Biosynthesis and Actions of Sex Steroids - Yasushi Hojo 2018
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fendo.2018.00183/full

"Penetration of plasma E2 into the hippocampus, however, is not able to account for the level of hippocampal E2 because hippocampal E2 is much higher than that in plasma."

This graphic is fascinating:
https://www.frontiersin.org/files/Articles/357380/fendo-09-00183-HTML-r1/image_m/fendo-09-00183-g001.jpg

Would love to hear anyone's thoughts on the influence of estrogen on spatial awareness and memory!

#hippocampus #estrogen #estradiol #neurosteroids #biosynthesis #GranuleCell

Neurosteroids in Adult Hippocampus of Male and Female Rodents: Biosynthesis and Actions of Sex Steroids

The brain is not only the target of steroid hormones but also is able to locally synthesize steroids de novo. Evidence of the local production of steroids in the brain has been accumulating in various vertebrates, including teleost fish, amphibia, birds, rodents, non-human primates, and humans. In this review, we mainly focus on the local production of sex steroids in the hippocampal neurons of adult rodents (rats and mice), a center for learning and memory. From the data of the hippocampus of adult male rats, hippocampal principal neurons [pyramidal cells in CA1–CA3 and granule cells in dentate gyrus (DG)] have a complete system for biosynthesis of sex steroids. Liquid chromatography with tandem-mass-spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) enabled us to accurately determine the levels of hippocampal sex steroids including 17β-estradiol (17β-E2), testosterone (T), and dihydrotestosterone (DHT), which are much higher than those in blood. Next, we review the steroid synthesis in the hippocampus of female rats, since previous knowledge had been biased toward the data from males. Recently, we clarified that the levels of hippocampal steroids fluctuate in adult female rats across the estrous cycle. Accurate determination of hippocampal steroids at each stage of the estrous cycle is of importance for providing the account for the fluctuation of female hippocampal functions, including spine density, long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), and learning and memory. These funct...

Frontiers