Linear and inverted U-shaped dose-response functions describe estrogen effects on hippocampal activity in young women

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Abstract

In animals, 17-beta-estradiol (E2) enhances hippocampal plasticity in a dose-dependent, monotonically increasing manner, but this relationship can also exhibit an inverted U-shaped function. To investigate E2's dose-response function in the human hippocampus, we pharmacologically increased E2 levels in 125 naturally cycling women (who were in their low-hormone menstruation phase) to physiological (equivalent to menstrual cycle peak) and supraphysiological (equivalent to levels during early pregnancy) concentrations in a placebo-controlled design. Twenty-four hours after first E2 intake, we measured brain activity during encoding of neutral and negative pictures and then tested recognition memory 24 h after encoding. Here we report that E2 exhibits both a monotonically increasing relationship with hippocampal activity as well as an inverted U-shaped relationship, depending on the hippocampal region. Hippocampal activity exhibiting a U-shaped relationship inflects at supraphysiological E2 levels, suggesting that while E2 within physiological ranges stimulates hippocampal activity, supraphysiological ranges show opposite effects.

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Bayer, J., Gläscher, J., Finsterbusch, J., Schulte, L. H., & Sommer, T. (2018). Linear and inverted U-shaped dose-response functions describe estrogen effects on hippocampal activity in young women. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03679-x

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