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Dive into the research topics where Robert W. Goy is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert W. Goy.


Hormones and Behavior | 1988

Behavioral masculinization is independent of genital masculinization in prenatally androgenized female rhesus macaques.

Robert W. Goy; Fred B. Bercovitch; Mary C. McBrair

Genetic female fetuses were exposed transplacentally to testosterone propionate injected into their mothers either early (Days 40 through 64) or late (Days 115 through 139) in gestation. Early and late androgenized females (EAFs and LAFs, respectively) were raised with normal males and females that served as criteria for evaluating degree of behavioral masculinization induced by the prenatal androgen. EAFs were genitally virilized and LAFs were not. Males and untreated females differed reliably on five behavioral measures: males showed more mother-mounting, more peer-mounting, more rough play with peers, a preference for initiating play with male partners, and less grooming of mothers. Neither type of prenatally androgenized female showed masculinization of all five types of behavior. Compared with females, EAFs showed more mother-mounting, more peer-mounting, less mother-grooming, did not differ from females in rough play, and did not manifest a preference for male partners. LAFs, like females, groomed but did not mount their mothers, and did not show a preference for male partners; but unlike females they showed elevated rough play and mounting with peers. EAFs showed a statistically significant delay in puberty onset (menarche), but LAFs did not. Mothers inspected genitalia of their offspring more often if they were males than if they were females. Mothers of EAFs inspected their offsprings genitalia as often as mothers of males, but mothers of LAFs did not. No aspect of maternal behavior was associated with either the amount or kind of masculine behavior shown toward peers. We interpret the results to mean that genital virilization is independent of, and largely irrelevant to, the expression of those behavioral traits that characterize the juvenile male social role. Moreover, the individual behavior traits that are components of the juvenile male role are independently regulated by the organizing actions of androgen and have separable critical periods. Of the two major traits, mounting peers and rough play with peers, the latter has a greater requirement for androgenic stimulation late in prenatal life.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 1992

In utero and lactational exposure of male rats to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin: 2. Effects on sexual behavior and the regulation of luteinizing hormone secretion in adulthood☆

Thomas A. Mably; Robert W. Moore; Robert W. Goy; Richard E. Peterson

When administered to postpubescent male rats, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) decreases plasma androgen concentrations. If such an androgenic deficiency were produced prenatally and/or early postnatally it could impair sexual differentiation of the central nervous system (CNS) and thereby alter male reproductive function. To examine this possibility, sexually dimorphic functions were assessed in male rats born to dams given TCDD (0.064, 0.16, 0.40, and 1.0 micrograms/kg, po) or vehicle on Day 15 of gestation. Masculine sexual behavior was assessed at approximately 60, 75, and 115 days of age. When TCDD-exposed males were caged with receptive control females their mount, intromission, and ejaculation latencies were far longer than normal; these effects were dose-related and were statistically significant at maternal doses as low as 0.16, 0.064, and 0.16 micrograms TCDD/kg, respectively. The numbers of mounts and intromissions to ejaculation were slightly increased by TCDD, while copulatory rates [(mounts+intromissions)/min] were significantly decreased at the three highest maternal doses. Except for a modest increase at the higher doses, TCDD had little effect on the postejaculatory interval. Following assessment of their masculine sexual behavior, the males were castrated and 6 weeks later tested for feminine sexual behavior (lordosis). After being primed with estradiol benzoate and treated with progesterone, males displayed dose-related increases in lordosis quotient and lordosis intensity in response to being mounted by another male. These effects were statistically significant at maternal doses as low as 0.16 and 0.40 micrograms TCDD/kg, respectively. To determine if perinatal TCDD exposure alters the sexually dimorphic regulation of luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion, the LH secretory responsiveness of the hypothalamic/pituitary axis to ovarian steroids was assessed. In unexposed, gonadectomized female rats primed with estradiol benzoate, progesterone injection produced a surge in plasma LH concentrations, whereas in similarly treated control males, plasma LH concentrations were unaffected by progesterone. In castrated, estradiol benzoate-primed male rats that were perinatally exposed to TCDD, progesterone treatment produced dose-related increases in plasma LH concentrations that were statistically significant at the two highest maternal doses. We conclude that in utero and lactational exposure to small amounts of TCDD demasculinizes and feminizes male rats. These effects cannot be accounted for by TCDD-induced hypophagia, modest reductions in adult plasma androgen concentrations, possible nonspecific changes in motor activity, or possible reductions in penile sensitivity to sexual stimulation. The altered sexual behaviors and LH secretion were observed when nearly all TCDD had been excreted (as evidenced by uninduced hepatic ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase activity).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Neuroendocrinology | 1980

Effects of Discrete Lesions of Preoptic and Suprachiasmatic Structures in the Female Rat

Stanley J. Wiegand; Ei Terasawa; William E. Bridson; Robert W. Goy

The purpose of this study was to determine which specific structures within the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area are necessary to maintain cyclic ovulation in the rat, and to define the deifcit(s) in the feedback regulation of gonadotropin secretion associated with lesions that result in anovulation. Large (approximately 1.1 mm dia.) or small (approximately 0.7 mm dia.) electrolytic lesions were placed in several loci within preoptic, anterior hyopthalamic and suprachiasmatic areas in regularly cycling adult female rats. Large lesions which included the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN) induced an anovulatory condition characterized by persistent vaginal cornification and polyfollicular ovaries (persistent estrus). Large or small lesions which included the medial preoptic nucleus (MPN), a small periventricular column of cells located immediately caudal to the organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT), also induced persistent estrus. Lesions placed elsewhere within the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area never induced persistent estrus but were frequently associated with repeated periods of prolonged diestrus separated by brief periods of vaginal cornification. These prolonged diestrous intervals appeared to be related to spontaneous luteal activation following ovulation rather than impaired folliculogenesis. LH and FSH surges induced by sequential administration of estradiol benzoate and progesterone (P) were completely abolished only by lesions which included the MPN. Small lesions involving only the MPN and OVLT or the MPN and caudally adjacent loci in the suprachiasmatic region were as effective in this respect as larger lesions encompassing most of the preoptic-suprachiasmatic region from the diagonal band of Broca to the rostral pole of the SCN. On the other hand, P-induced gonadotropin surges were never completely blocked by SCN lesions, although the magnitude of the surge was highly variable and frequently attenuated compared to controls. It is concluded that both the MPN and SCN are required for the long-term maintenance of spontaneous cyclic ovulation in the rat. However, the characteristically dissimilar deficits in P-induced gonadotropin release associated with lesions of one or the other of these structures indicate that these nuclei may play different roles in the regulation of gonadotropin surges. It is suggested that neural elements indispensable for phasic gonadotropin release are located within and/or immediately adjacent to the MPN. The SCN may influence phasic gonadotropin release indirectly, by regulating circadian rhythms which govern the responsiveness of other neural elements to hormonal stimuli.


Brain Research | 1978

Heterosexual, autosexual and social behavior of adult male rhesus monkeys with medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic lesions.

Jefferson C. Slimp; Benjamin L. Hart; Robert W. Goy

Bilateral radiofrequency lesions were made in the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic (MP-AH) area of 6 adult male rhesus monkeys; 5 sham-lesioned subjects served as controls. Behavioral analysis consisted of observations on copulatory behavior, yawning, masturbation and some aspects of social behavior. MP-AH lesions reduced or completely eliminated the display of manual contacts of the partner, mounts, intromissions and ejaculations without interfering with masturbation. Yawning, a sexually dimorphic behavior, was not affected either, Measure of several social behaviors indicated no evidence of social withdrawal or other aberrance of social interactions, which might have led to the decline in heterosexual behavior. The results with regard to copulatory behavior were consistent with the effects of MP-AH lesions in rats, cats and dogs. In rhesus monkeys it appears as though the MP-AH region is specifically involved in the mediation of heterosexual copulation and is not vital to the performance of other forms of male sexual activity such as masturbation. Also the MP-AH is not critical for the display of all sexually dimorphic behaviors. The types of behavioral change in MP-AH lesioned subjects differed to some extent from those following castration, indicating that the effects of the lesions cannot be explained as basically that of functional castration.


Hormones and Behavior | 1975

Ovarian hormones and food intake in female guinea pigs and rhesus monkeys.

John A. Czaja; Robert W. Goy

Abstract Food intake was measured during ovarian cycles of female guinea pigs and rhesus monkeys. In both species, the period of lowest food intake occurred around the expected time of ovulation. Feeding levels were lowest in the guinea pig during the time of estrus, estrus being estimated on the basis of vaginal membrane changes. Minimum food intake in the rhesus occurred prior to the midpoint of the menstrual cycle, on Day 13, approximately 15–16 days before the next menstruation. In ovariectomized females of both species, either multiple or single estradiol injections significantly lowered food intake. Single progesterone injections to such females were found to have no significant effect on levels of feeding.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1981

Effects of ovarian steroids on serotonin metabolism within grossly dissected and microdissected brain regions of the ovariectomized rat.

Ric I. Cone; Gary A. Davis; Robert W. Goy

Brain serotonin (5-HT) levels and accumulation rate within the dorsal raphe nucleus (DR) were elevated in ovariectomized (OVX) rats after ovarian steroid treatment, which consisted of estradiol benzoate (EB) followed by progesterone (P) 48 hr later. Some animals were also given the monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitor pargyline at designated times 10-40 min prior to sacrifice. Decapitation occurred 5 hr following the second steroid injection and 4-6 hr into the dark phase of a 14:10 light/dark cycle. Basal 5-HT levels and the rate of 5-HT accumulation (5-HTr) following MAO inhibition were estimated by radioenzymatic assay of brain tissue punched from frozen sections or dissected freehand. Within the DR, 5-HT levels and 5-HTr rates were respectively 13.8% (p less than 0.001) and 23.2% (p less than 0.025) higher in EB+P treated females compared with oil controls. Differences in basal 5-HT were found within the median raphe nucleus, but these were inconsistent from experiment to experiment. No differences were found in tissue immediately adjacent to these nuclear regions or within other brain regions including the ventral medial nucleus and suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus. Increased levels of 5-HT were also found in grossly dissected tissue containing the mesencephalic raphe nuclei.


Hormones and Behavior | 1977

Effects of estradiol benzoate, estrone, and propionates of testosterone or dihydrotestosterone on sexual and related behaviors of ovariectomized Rhesus monkeys.

Kim Wallen; Robert W. Goy

Abstract Ovariectomized adult rhesus monkeys were injected daily for 10 days with either 1 mg of dihydrotestosterone propionate (DHTP), 1 mg of testosterone propionate (TP), 10 μg of estradiol benzoate (EB), or 500 μg of estrone (El). On the 5th and 10th days of treatment, females received two 24-min behavioral tests with each of two adult males. All females received every hormonal treatment during the course of the study, with the order of treatments counterbalanced. Prior to the initiation of an hormonal treatment, each subject received two tests with no hormone treatment (NORX). Three behaviors related to female proceptivity were recorded. Treatment with DHTP had no influence on any aspect of proceptivity measured, in comparison to the NORX condition, whereas El or TP treatment augmented the frequencies of two of the proceptive behaviors and EB increased all three. The response of the male toward the female was influenced by the females hormonal condition. Treatment with TP or DHTP did not increase the frequency of male contact or the mount rate in comparison to the NORX condition, whereas EB or El treatment did. In addition, DHTP was the only steroid which failed to increase the percentage of tests with intromission or ejaculation when compared to NORX. Female receptivity, as measured by acceptance or rejection of male contacts, was not different for the NORX-, TP-, EB-, or El-treated conditions. DHTP treatment, however, reduced female receptivity in comparison to all other conditions. Treatment with DHTP or TP resulted in an increase in the frequency of female yawning behavior, whereas neither estrogen treatment showed any effect on this behavior. The influences of TP on female proceptive and male sexual behavior were never duplicated or even approximated by treatment of females with the nonaromatizable DHTP. Nor was there any evidence that TP inhibited female receptivity below the level characteristic of NORX females, as was true for DHTP.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 1966

Inhibitory action of the corpus luteum on the hormonal induction of estrous behavior in the guinea pig

Robert W. Goy; Charles H. Phoenix; William Chad Young

In the intact female guinea pig the neural tissues mediating estrous behavior vary in their responsiveness to exogenous estradiol and progesterone. Prior to the onset of cyclic ovarian activity estrous behavior was induced in 100% of the females treated with 6.0 μ g estradiol followed 36 hours later with 0.4 mg progesterone. Among females with established cyclic activity, the same treatment induced estrous behavior in only 20 to 40% of the subjects. Among mature females responsiveness of the neural tissues was closely regulated by the stage of the cycle. Paralleling the growth and regression of the corpus luteum, responsiveness waxed and waned in a cyclic fashion. During the first 3 days of the cycle, administration of 6.0 μ g estradiol and 0.4 mg progesterone induced estrous behavior in 14 of the 31 tests. From Days 4 through 11 the same treatment was effective in only 3 of 81 tests. In the later stages of the cycle (Day 12 through 14) over 70% of the 27 females tested displayed estrous behavior, and on Days 15 through 18 all females responded positively to the injected hormones. Responsiveness was rapidly restored after ovariectomy, and 88% of the females tested 36 hours after spaying and treatment with the exogenous hormones displayed typical estrous behavior. Indirect evidence that progesterone is the principal factor regulating responsiveness was obtained by tests on pregnant females. None of 7 females from the 12th through the 65th day of gestation responded to the injected hormones. In view of the preceding antagonisms between estrogen and progesterone, the findings that the injection of spayed females with 4 to 10 times the effective quantity of progesterone following estradiol produced no reduction in the various measures of estrous behavior or the proportion of S s responding were difficult to understand.


Hormones and Behavior | 1978

Heterosexual interactions in laboratory-housed stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides): observations during the menstrual cycle and after ovariectomy.

A.K. Slob; Stanley J. Wiegand; Robert W. Goy; J.A. Robinson

Abstract Heterosexual interactions of pairs of stumptail macaques (Macaca arctoides) were studied in relation to the female menstrual cycle and after ovariectomy. Five intact male and 10 tubal-ligated female macaques were observed in laboratory pair tests of 20-mins duration, and data were obtained on various male and female behaviors. Each male was tested with the same two females during four 40-day observation periods. Males were tested daily and females were tested every other day. After two 40-day testing periods, one female partner of each male was ovariectomized and the other was sham-operated. Blood was collected regularly from the females during the course of observation and serum levels of estradiol and progesterone were determined by radioimmunoassay. The midcycle peak of estradiol was observed to occur approximately 18 days prior to menses. A distinct secondary peak in estradiol was observed to occur during the luteal phase of all cycles examined. Of 28 different male and female behaviors studied only female presentation to male sexual contact showed a significant midcycle peak related to the endogenous estradiol surge. After ovariectomy a significant decrease in the frequency of several male copulatory behaviors was observed, but most males continued to copulate regularly with their spayed partners throughout the period of this study. Thus, the pattern of copulatory behavior observed in stumptail macaques over the cycle of the female partner and subsequent to ovariectomy differs from that observed in other macaque species studied in the laboratory. It is concluded that cyclical fluctuations in the level of ovarian hormones are not significantly related to measures of sexual interactions in laboratory tests of this species, although the maintenance of copulation and associated behaviors at high levels depends to some degree upon the ovary.


Hormones and Behavior | 1986

Expression of male-typical behavior in adult female pseudohermaphroditic rhesus: Comparisons with normal males and neonatally gonadectomized males and females

Steven M. Pomerantz; Robert W. Goy; Marc M. Roy

Two types of pseudohermaphroditic female rhesus produced by exposure to either testosterone propionate (TP) or dihydrotestosterone propionate (DHTP) prior to birth were ovariectomized postpuberally and evaluated for the display of male-typical sexual behavior in response to exogenous TP in adulthood (2 mg/kg/day for 12 weeks). Their performance in standardized tests with estrogenized female partners was compared to that of neonatally gonadectomized males and females identically tested and treated with exogenous TP as adults. In addition intact adult males not given exogenous TP were tested with the same estrogenized female partners. There were no reliable differences between the two types of pseudohermaphrodites on any measure of behavior shown during the tests. Accordingly results were combined. Reliable behavioral changes induced by the TP given in adulthood were limited to increases in purse-lip responses, the induced increases were similar in pseudohermaphrodites and castrated males, and increases were reliably greater in these two groups of subjects than in females. Pseudohermaphrodites and castrated males did not differ reliably from intact males in performance of purse-lip gestures during TP treatment. In the performance of mounting, however, pseudohermaphrodites and castrated males remained consistently below the standard of the intact males. The estrogenized female partners displayed proceptive responses most frequently to the intact males and least frequently to the females. Their proceptive responses with castrated males resembled their performance with intact males, but with pseudohermaphrodites their proceptive responses more closely resembled their performance with females. Receptive behavior of the female partners was displayed most frequently to intact males, at intermediate levels to castrated males, and least often to pseudohermaphrodites. Results are completely consistent with the notion that androgens in high concentrations before birth alter mechanisms related to the later display of masculine behavior. These alterations in behavioral mechanisms are of such a nature that the display of male-typical behavior induced by androgens in adulthood is more pronounced and more frequent than it would have been otherwise. The alterations in masculine behavior observed in pseudohermaphroditic rhesus are not different in kind or scope than those reported extensively for lower mammals.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Marc M. Roy

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David A. Goldfoot

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kim Wallen

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Samuel A. Sholl

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Ei Terasawa

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Steven M. Pomerantz

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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William E. Bridson

National Institutes of Health

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