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Female Hormone Key to Male Brain |
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Female hormones circulating in the brain
determine masculine behavior, at least in mice. Estrogen--the quintessential
female hormone responsible for regulating the reproductive cycle--turns lady
mice into wannabe male mice when it is allowed to penetrate the brain during
development, according to new research. Neuroscientist
Julie Bakker of the University of Liege in Belgium and her colleagues proved
this in the course of solving one of the longstanding riddles of brain
development. Although it had long been known that a certain
protein--alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)--plays a key role in mouse brain development
by binding to estrogen, it was unclear whether AFP facilitates the
development of female brains by carrying the hormone or simply by blocking it
from entering the brain. The scientists
used female mice incapable of producing AFP and set them loose in a
Plexiglass aquarium with a sexually active male. To give them extra incentive
to mate, they also received injections and capsules of female hormones. But,
unlike their wild cousins, the AFP-deficient mice showed little interest in
the male's advances and their brains had fewer cells devoted to producing
certain chemicals critical to reproduction, just like males. Furthermore,
when placed in a cage with a sexually receptive female, the mice without AFP
tried to mimic their male counterparts by mounting the female and engaging in
pelvic thrusting. These
observations still didn't constitute definitive proof that AFP helped female
mice stay ladylike by blocking estrogen, however. So the researchers
prevented AFP-deficient mice from being exposed to estrogen while still in
the womb. Without AFP and without estrogen during brain development, these
mice proved just as behaviorally female as their wild cousins, the researchers
report in the February issue of Nature Neuroscience. In addition to
revealing that it is the lack of estrogen that makes the brains of female
mice feminine, the findings indicate that it is the presence of the hormone
that makes male mice behave as males. In primates,
including humans, androgen--not estrogen--plays the key role in making men's
brains masculine and AFP does not bind to estrogens. But the appropriately
named sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) may play a similar role to that of
AFP, Bakker notes, keeping women feminine and allowing baby boys develop
masculine behavior.
RETURN TO ARCHIVES Updated
01/06 |
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