GGrantIndex
← Search

Estrogen and the Aging Primate Brain

$73,067ZIAFY2017AGNIH

National Institute On Aging

Investigators

Linked publications & trials

Abstract

Progress on this trans-institutional collaborative effort in recent years has focused on continued quantitative morphometric analysis in the brains of behaviorally characterized subjects in relation to estrogen status. In a recent study, for example, Crimins et. al. (2017) used quantitative serial section immunoelectron microscopy to test the effects of estradiol administration on the representation of G protein-coupled estrogen receptor 1 (GPER1) in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of ovariectomized young and aged monkeys. GPER1 was distributed across a wide range of cellular components, but generally failed to differ as a function of age, hormone treatment, or cognitive status. Nonetheless, GPER1 representation specifically at the synapse was closely associated with synaptic density, suggesting that GPER1 is positioned to mediate a powerful influence of estrogen on synaptic plasticity. Future studies are expected to yield additional insight into the neurobiological implications of menopause and hormone treatment on womens cognitive health in aging.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →