Steroids in the Avian Brain: Heterogeneity across Space and Time.
Barney A SchlingerPublished in: Journal of ornithology (2015)
Sex steroids influence a diversity of neural and behavioral endpoints in birds, including some that have little to do with reproduction per se. Recent advances in neurochemistry and molecular biology further indicate that the avian brain is comprised of a network of unique sex steroid microenvironments. Factors involved in steroid synthesis and metabolism are present in the avian brain with expression levels that vary from region to region and with activities that are, in some cases, subject to regulation over relatively slow or rapid time intervals. Advances in our ability to a) isolate steroids from brain tissue and b) precisely measure their concentrations reveal how steroid levels vary spatially and temporally. A full appreciation of sex steroid effects on the avian brain require not only measures of hormones in blood but also an understanding of the numerous and varied mechanisms whereby the brain creates such a heterogeneous steroidal environment.