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Müllerian inhibiting substance contributes to sex-linked biases in the brain and behavior

机译:苗勒勒抑制物质助长大脑和行为中与性别有关的偏见

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摘要

Many behavioral traits and most brain disorders are common to males and females but are more evident in one sex than the other. The control of these subtle sex-linked biases is largely unstudied and has been presumed to mirror that of the highly dimorphic reproductive nuclei. Sexual dimorphism in the reproductive tract is a product of Müllerian inhibiting substance (MIS), as well as the sex steroids. Males with a genetic deficiency in MIS signaling are sexually males, leading to the presumption that MIS is not a neural regulator. We challenge this presumption by reporting that most immature neurons in mice express the MIS-specific receptor (MISRII) and that male Mis−/− and Misrii−/− mice exhibit subtle feminization of their spinal motor neurons and of their exploratory behavior. Consequently, MIS may be a broad regulator of the subtle sex-linked biases in the nervous system.
机译:许多行为特征和大多数脑部疾病在男性和女性中很常见,但一种性别比另一种性别更明显。这些与性别相关的细微偏差的控制在很大程度上尚未得到研究,并被认为与高度双态生殖细胞核的镜像相似。生殖道中的性二态性是苗勒氏抑制物质(MIS)以及性类固醇的产物。 MIS信号遗传缺乏的男性是性男性,因此推测MIS不是神经调节剂。我们通过报告小鼠中大多数未成熟的神经元表达MIS特异性受体(MISRII)以及雄性Mis-/-和Misrii-/-小鼠的脊髓运动神经元及其探索行为表现出微弱的女性化,来挑战这一假设。因此,MIS可能是神经系统中与性别相关的细微偏差的广泛调节器。

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