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Age, sex, and reproductive hormone effects on brain serotonin-1A and serotonin-2A receptor binding in a healthy population

  • Eydie L. Moses-Kolko
  • , Julie C. Price
  • , Nilesh Shah
  • , Sarah Berga
  • , Susan M. Sereika
  • , Patrick M. Fisher
  • , Rhaven Coleman
  • , Carl Becker
  • , N. Scott Mason
  • , Tammy Loucks
  • , Carolyn C. Meltzer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Scopus citations

Abstract

There is a need for rigorous positron emission tomography (PET) and endocrine methods to address inconsistencies in the literature regarding age, sex, and reproductive hormone effects on central serotonin (5HT) 1A and 2A receptor binding potential (BP). Healthy subjects (n71), aged 20-80 years, underwent 5HT1A and 2A receptor imaging using consecutive 90-min PET acquisitions with 11 CWAY100635 and 18 Faltanserin. Logan graphical analysis was used to derive BP using atrophy-corrected distribution volume (V T) in prefrontal, mesiotemporal, occipital cortices, and raphe nucleus (5HT1A only). We used multivariate linear regression modeling to examine BP relationships with age, age 2, sex, and hormone concentrations, with post hoc regional significance set at p0.008. There were small postsynaptic 5HT1A receptor BP increases with age and estradiol concentration in women (p0.004-0.005) and a tendency for small 5HT1A receptor BP declines with age and free androgen index in men (p0.05-0.06). Raphe 5HT1A receptor BP decreased 4.5% per decade of age (p0.05), primarily in men. There was a trend for 15% receptor reductions in prefrontal cortical regions in women relative to men (post hoc p0.03-0.10). The significant decline in 5HT2A receptor BP relative to age (8% per decade; p0.001) was not related to sex or hormone concentrations. In conclusion, endocrine standardization minimized confounding introduced by endogenous hormonal fluctuations and reproductive stage and permitted us to detect small effects of sex, age, and endogenous sex steroid exposures upon 5HT1A binding. Reduced prefrontal cortical 5HT1A receptor BP in women vs men, but increased 5HT1A receptor BP with aging in women, may partially explain the increased susceptibility to affective disorders in women during their reproductive years that is mitigated in later life. 5HT1A receptor decreases with age in men might contribute to the known increased risk for suicide in men over age 75 years. Low hormone concentrations in adults 50 years of age may be associated with more extreme 5HT1A receptor BP values, but remains to be studied further. The 5HT2A receptor declines with age were not related to sex or hormone concentrations in this sample. Additional study in clinical populations is needed to further examine the affective role of sex-hormone-serotonin receptor relationships.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2729-2740
Number of pages12
JournalNeuropsychopharmacology
Volume36
Issue number13
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2011

Keywords

  • PET imaging
  • [ C]WAY100635
  • [18F[altanserin
  • age
  • serotonin receptors
  • sex

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