“…ER-β mRNA was shown to be co-expressed with ER-α immunoreactivity in the same neuron in several brain regions: the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, medial amygdaloid nucleus, periventricular preoptic nucleus, medial preoptic nucleus, and anteroventral periventricular nucleus (Shughrue et al, 1998;Orikasa et al, 2002). In addition, in vitro studies have shown that ER-β can form heterodimers with ER-α (Cowley et al, 1997;Pace et al, 1997;Pettersson et al, 1997;Ogawa et al, 1998;Matsuda et al, 2002), 5 suggesting that estrogen may differentially modulate the activity of certain neuronal populations depending on whether the cells express ER-α, ER-β or both (Shughrue et al, 1998). ER-β mRNA is also highly distributed in several rat brain regions, including the olfactory bulb, cerebral cortex, paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus, supraoptic nucleus, hippocampus and cerebellar Purkinje cells, areas that contain little or no ER-α mRNA (Simerly et al, 1990;Shughrue et al, 1997;Mufson et al, 1999;Shima et al, 2003;Mehra et al, 2005).…”