Effects of Orchidectomy on Nigro‐Striatal Dopaminergic Function: Behavioral and Physiological Evidence

Abstract
In the present experiments, we examined the effect of castration upon two indices of nigro-striatal dopaminergic function in the male rat. In Experiment I, differences in spontaneous locomotor behavioral activity between intact and castrated male rats were examined. The total distance traveled, horizontal activity and mean revolutions of castrated male rats were significantly greater than that of intact males. No significant differences between intact and castrated males were obtained for vertical activity. In Experiment II, the spontaneous in vitro dopamine release from the corpus striatum of intact and castrated rats as sampled during the light-phase (1500 h) and dark-phase (2400 h) of the photoperiod was examined. At both time periods, the spontaneous in vitro dopamine release of castrated males was significantly greater than that of intact males. Both intact and castrated males showed statistically significant increases in dopamine release at the 2400 h compared to the 1500 h time period. To examine if testicular hormones were responsible for these castration induced changes in dopamine release, in Experiment III we treated castrated male rats with testosterone propionate. Administration of testosterone propionate (0.1 mg/day × 5 days) significantly reduced in vitro dopamine release compared to untreated or castrated male rats receiving vehicle treatment. These results demonstrate that testicular hormones, most likely testosterone, have a markedly suppressive effect upon the nigro-striatal dopaminergic system as evidenced from changes in spontaneous behavioral activity and in vitro dopamine release.