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A quantitative study of serum testosterone,sex accessory organ growth,and the development of intermale aggression in the mouse
Authors:Marylynn Samuel Barkley  Bruce D Goldman
Institution:Department of Biobehavioral Sciences, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06268 USA
Abstract:Radioimmunoassay of serum testosterone (T) was used to characterize circulating T levels in mice from birth to sexual maturity. Until 25 days of age, serum T levels ranged from 1 to 4 ng/ml. A significant increase in T concentrations was observed in 30-day-old males, followed by a secondary rise in serum T between Days 45 and 50 of life. The latter increment was associated with the appearance of extreme individual variation in circulating T levels which was also observed in adult (120 days) males. The most rapid growth of accessory sex organs occurred between 30 and 50 days of age, the period preceding attainment of peak serum-T levels. The first incidence of intermale aggression coincided with a prepubertal rise in circulating T, but adult levels of fighting were present prior to the secondary increase in T observed between 45 and 50 days of age. Although animals involved in a fight did not differ with respect to weight of the accessory sex organs or serum T concentrations, the male that weighed more than his opponent usually won an encounter. Compared to males in encounters in which no fighting occurred, animals that won or lost an aggressive encounter showed significantly greater accessory sex organ development. While circulating T is required for the initiation and maintenance of intermale aggression, it is apparent that additional factors are related to the onset of fighting and the establishment of dominance/ subordinance relationships in mice.
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