Nature Neuroscience7, 1034 - 1039 (2004)
Published online: 27 September 2004; | doi:10.1038/nn1325
Sexual differentiation of the vertebrate nervous system
John A Morris, Cynthia L Jordan
& S Marc Breedlove
Neuroscience Program, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA.
Correspondence should be addressed to S Marc Breedlove breedsm@msu.edu
Understanding the mechanisms that give rise to sex differences in the behavior of nonhuman animals may contribute to the understanding of sex differences in humans. In vertebrate model systems, a single factorthe steroid hormone testosteroneaccounts for most, and perhaps all, of the known sex differences in neural structure and behavior. Here we review some of the events triggered by testosterone that masculinize the developing and adult nervous system, promote male behaviors and suppress female behaviors. Testosterone often sculpts the developing nervous system by inhibiting or exacerbating cell death and/or by modulating the formation and elimination of synapses. Experience, too, can interact with testosterone to enhance or diminish its effects on the central nervous system. However, more work is needed to uncover the particular cells and specific genes on which testosterone acts to initiate these events.
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