Sexual Arousal Dependent On Flow Of Potassium Ions In Brain Cells

Thursday, June 12, 2008 - 07:28 in Biology & Nature

When it comes to sex, a female rat knows how to avoid a communication breakdown. To announce her sexual readiness, she will automatically arch her back, deflect her tail and stand rigid to allow an aroused male to mount. Now, researchers have figured out the precise chemical and physical mechanism in a group of brain cells that controls this swayback posture, a reflex called lordosis that signals one of life's most complex yet primitive instincts -- the need for sex. The team also found that when female rats are treated with the sex hormone estradiol before the experiment, the number of cells that respond to norepinephrine soar, making the impulse to mate stronger.

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