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Sexual
Identity Hard-Wired by Genetics
Sexual identity is wired into the genes,
which discounts the concept that homosexuality and transgender
sexuality are a choice, California researchers reported.
"Our findings may help answer an
important question -- why do we feel male or female?" Dr. Eric
Vilain, a genetics professor at the University of California,
Los Angeles School of Medicine, said in a statement. "Sexual identity
is rooted in every person's biology before birth and springs from
a variation in our individual genome."
His team has identified 54 genes
in mice that may explain why male and female brains look and function
differently.
Since the 1970s, scientists have
believed that estrogen and testosterone were wholly responsible
for sexually organizing the brain. Recent evidence, however, indicates
that hormones cannot explain everything about the sexual differences
between male and female brains.
Published in the latest edition
of the journal Molecular Brain Research, the UCLA discovery may
also offer physicians an improved tool for gender assignment of
babies born with ambiguous genitalia.
Mild cases of malformed genitalia
occur in 1 percent of all births -- about 3 million cases. More
severe cases -- where doctors can't inform parents whether they
had a boy or girl -- occur in one in 3,000 births.
"If physicians could predict the
gender of newborns with ambiguous genitalia at birth, we would
make less mistakes in gender assignment," Vilain said.
Using two genetic testing methods,
the researchers compared the production of genes in male and female
brains in embryonic mice -- long before the animals developed
sex organs.
They found 54 genes produced in
different amounts in male and female mouse brains, prior to hormonal
influence. Eighteen of the genes were produced at higher levels
in the male brains; 36 were produced at higher levels in the female
brains.
"We discovered that the male and
female brains differed in many measurable ways, including anatomy
and function." Vilain said.
For example, the two hemispheres
of the brain appeared more symmetrical in females than in males.
According to Vilain, the symmetry may improve communication between
both sides of the brain, leading to enhanced verbal expressiveness
in females.
"This anatomical difference may
explain why women can sometimes articulate their feelings more
easily than men," he said.
The scientists plan to conduct
further studies to determine the specific role for each of the
54 genes they identified.
"Our findings may explain why we
feel male or female, regardless of our actual anatomy," said Vilain.
"These discoveries lend credence to the idea that being transgender
--- feeling that one has been born into the body of the wrong
sex -- is a state of mind.
Reference
Source 89
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