homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Why are females better at coping with stress? Study suggests estrogen is the key

Society today is becoming ever stressed out it seems. According to a recent American Psychological Association poll, nearly a quarter of Americans confessed to currently feeling under “extreme stress,” however not all of us are as stressed under the same conditions. For instance, there’s a general consensus in the medical world that women are better at […]

Tibi Puiu
July 18, 2013 @ 5:22 am

share Share

stress Society today is becoming ever stressed out it seems. According to a recent American Psychological Association poll, nearly a quarter of Americans confessed to currently feeling under “extreme stress,” however not all of us are as stressed under the same conditions. For instance, there’s a general consensus in the medical world that women are better at coping with stress than men, despite it’s been unclear why. Recently, however, University at Buffalo researchers have published a paper in which they suggest that estrogen in the brain allows females to better withstand chronic stress.

Although its not considered psychiatric disorder per se, chronic stress can be a trigger for the development of psychiatric disorders in vulnerable individuals – this in the worst case scenario, the rest of the time it’s a real pest that comes in the way of happiness. Females have been found to be more resilient to stress, a fact that has been accounted to responsibilities inequality in the past (men went to work, fought wars, engaged in vices, while women stayed at home to tend children), however this explanation isn’t sufficient today’s gender equal society.

UB researchers led by  Zhen Yan, PhD, a professor in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics in the UB School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, found that there is actually a molecular mechanism that underlines gender-specific effects of stress. Namely, it seems females respond better to stress thanks to the protective properties of estrogen.

[RELATED] Smiling facilitates stress relief 

This conclusion came after the scientists subjected rats, both males and females, to a one week-long session of period stress. Female rats which went through the stressful physical restrain showed no impairment in their ability to remember and recognize objects they had previously been shown. In contrast, young males exposed to the same stress were impaired in their short-term memory.

Yan and colleagues had shown in a previous study published in the journal Neuron showed that repeated stress results in loss of the glutamate receptor in the prefrontal cortex of young males. The glutamate receptor is the brain region that controls working memory, attention, decision-making, emotion and other high-level “executive” processes.

Correlating with present findings, its clear the rat young males had trouble properly signaling the glutamate receptor. The glutamate receptor in stressed females, however, was found to be intact. The researchers had an educated hunch that estrogen plays a key role in this gender differentiation of stressful effects, so they manipulating the amount of estrogen produced in the brains of rats. Thus, the UB researchers were able to make the males respond to stress more like females and the females respond more like males.

“When estrogen signaling in the brains of females was blocked, stress exhibited detrimental effects on them,” explains Yan. “When estrogen signaling was activated in males, the detrimental effects of stress were blocked.

“We still found the protective effect of estrogen in female rats whose ovaries were removed,” says Yan. “It suggests that it might be estrogen produced in the brain that protects against the detrimental effects of stress.”

In the current study, Yan and her colleagues found that the enzyme aromatase, which produces estradiol, an estrogen hormone, in the brain, is responsible for female stress resilience. They found that aromatase levels are significantly higher in the prefrontal cortex of female rats.

That’s not to say that we might be seeing estrogen treatments to males; the side-effects would be devastating. Other solutions might be found, however. The study’s key finding however is that it yet again strengthens the idea that the glutamate receptor is responsible for stress mitigation, a fundamental aspect other researchers could use to develop effective treatments.

“If we could find compounds similar to estrogen that could be administered without causing hormonal side effects, they could prove to be a very effective treatment for stress-related problems in males,” she says.

The findings were published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

share Share

Did Columbus Bring Syphilis to Europe? Ancient DNA Suggests So

A new study pinpoints the origin of the STD to South America.

Mysterious "Disease X" identified as aggressive strain of malaria

The mystery of this Disease X seems to have been solved. Now to develop an approach to handling it.

Bird Flu Strikes Again: Severe Case Confirmed in the US. Here's what you need to know

Bird flu continues to loom as a global threat. A severe case in Louisiana is the latest development in a series of concerning H5N1 outbreaks.

Scientists Discover a Surprising Side Effect of Intermittent Fasting — Slower Hair Regrowth

Fasting benefits metabolism but may hinder hair regeneration, at least in mice.

Origami-Inspired Heart Valve May Revolutionize Treatment for Toddlers

A team of researchers at UC Irvine has developed an origami-inspired heart valve that grows with toddlers.

Depression Risk Surges by 40% During Perimenopause, New Study Reveals

Women in the perimenopause stage are 40% more likely to experience depression compared to those who aren’t undergoing menopausal changes, according to a new study led by researchers at University College London (UCL). This research, published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, draws on data from over 9,000 women across the globe and underscores an […]

Scientists Call for a Global Pause on Creating “Mirror Life” Before It’s Too Late: “The threat we’re talking about is unprecedented”

Creating synthetic lifeforms is almost here, and the consequences could be devastating.

Reading Actually Reshapes Your Brain — Here’s How It Changes Your Mind

Reading can change the brain.

If You Need Only 4 Hours of Sleep, You Might Have This Rare Genetic Mutation

Short sleepers cruise by on four to six hours a night and don’t seem to suffer ill effects. Turns out they’re genetically built to require less sleep than the rest of us.

Can You Tell Which Knot Is Strongest? Most People Fail This Surprisingly Tough Challenge

Knots are a test of physical intuition and most of us are failing hard.