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May 11, 2009
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Estrogen controls how brain processes sound jonathan.sherwood@rochester.edu Rochester scientists have discovered that the hormone estrogen plays a pivotal role in how the brain processes sounds. The findings, published this month in the Journal of Neuroscience, show for the first time that a sex hormone can directly affect auditory function. Understanding how estrogen changes the brain’s response to sound, say the authors, might open the door to new ways of treating hearing deficiencies. “We’ve discovered estrogen doing something totally unexpected,” says Raphael Pinaud, assistant professor of brain and cognitive sciences and lead author of the study. “We show that estrogen plays a central role in how the brain extracts and interprets auditory information. It does this on a scale of milliseconds in neurons, as opposed to days, months or even years in which estrogen is more commonly known to affect an organism.” Previous studies have hinted at a connection between estrogen and hearing in women who have low estrogen, says Pinaud. “Now it is clear that estrogen is a key molecule carrying brain signals, and that the right balance of hormone levels in men and women is important for reasons beyond its role as a sex hormone,” says Pinaud. Pinaud, along with Liisa Tremere, a research assistant professor of brain and cognitive sciences, and Jin Jeong, a postdoctoral fellow in Pinaud’s laboratory, demonstrated that increasing estrogen levels in brain regions that process auditory information caused heightened sensitivity of sound-processing neurons, which encoded more complex and subtle features of the sound stimulus. Perhaps more surprising, says Pinaud, is that by blocking either the actions of estrogen directly, or preventing brain cells from producing estrogen within auditory centers, the signaling that is necessary for the brain to process sounds essentially shuts down. Pinaud’s team also shows that estrogen is required to activate genes that instruct the brain to lay down memories of those sounds. “Based on our findings we must now see estrogen as a central regulator of hearing,” Pinaud says. “It both determines how carefully a sound must be processed, and activates intracellular processes that occur deep within the cell to form memories of sound experiences.”
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