Oestrogen Receptor Involved in Social Anxiety Suppression in Male Mice

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Researchers at the University of Tsukuba in Japan have discovered that oestrogen receptor (ER) β, expressed in the lateral septum of the limbic system, plays a crucial role in suppressing anxiety-like behaviour by male mice in social situations. Publishing their findings in Neuroscience, they also reported that the distribution and expression region of ERβ differs from that of ERα.

Oestradiol, a sex steroid hormone, plays an essential role in social behaviour, including regulating social anxiety, which is anxiety experienced when unknown individuals are encountered.

In males, testosterone secreted by the testes is converted to oestradiol in the brain, and the oestradiol binds to two types of oestrogen receptors (ERs), ERα and ERβ, to regulate social behaviour. However, its neuroendocrine basis has not been understood. In this study, the role of ERα and ERβ expressed in the lateral septum (LS), which regulates social anxiety, was investigated using male mice.

The researchers first investigated the expression of ERα and ERβ in the LS using genetically modified male mice. ERβ-expressing cells in the mice were labelled with red fluorescent protein, which revealed that the distributions of ERα and ERβ are different.

Furthermore, the researchers investigated the knockdown effects of ERα or ERβ gene expression in the LS of male mice during situations of social and nonsocial anxiety. The results show that social anxiety increases with the inhibition of ERβ expression.

Additionally, ERα- and ERβ-positive cells in the LS projected into different regions of the hypothalamus.

Thus, the researchers concluded that ERα- and ERβ-expressing cells in LS are distinct cell populations with different localisations and neuronal projections, and the ERβ population plays a crucial role in neural circuitry that regulates anxiety-like behaviour in social situations.

Source: University of Tsukuba