Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Health : The Atlantic: Study: Science Can Make Mice Gay

Health : The Atlantic
Health news and analysis on The Atlantic.
thumbnail Study: Science Can Make Mice Gay
May 29th 2013, 15:28

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twoshortplanks / flickr

PROBLEM: A Gallup poll last week said that 47 percent of people in the U.S. understand homosexuality to be genetic. In 1978, that number was only 13 percent. Here's how Americans have tracked over recent decades in response to "In your view, is being gay or lesbian something a person is born with, or due to factors such as upbringing and environment?"

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As people's "views" change, science is working to understand what "born with" means. In the late 1990s, conversation around a "gay gene" was very controversial. We won't likely trace human sexual orientation to a single gene, but research has made it apparent that sexuality can be influenced by manipulating genes, hormones, and neurotransmitters. Altering balances of testosterone and estrogen has been shown to affect sexuality, and imbalances of the neurotransmitter serotonin can make us hypersexual. In mice, serotonin has been tied to sexual preference -- mice bred without certain neurons have shown "no sexual preference." But scientists have never "reversed" any species' sexual orientation by messing with their genes.

METHODOLOGY: Researchers led by Shasha Zhang at Peking University in Beijing and reviewed by Dr. Catherine Dulac at Harvard bred certain female mice that lacked either serotonin or certain neurons that release serotonin in parts of their brains. They then compared their behaviors to the typical non-mutant mice.

RESULTS: Those mice with the mutations showed preferences for sniffing the head and genital areas of other female mice, as well as "try[ing] to grasp ... females by the waist before mounting on their back ... females displayed strong mounting preference toward the females, mounted female targets with shorter latency, higher frequency, and longer duration." Here are two examples of what scientific findings about mice defiling each other looks like in a prestigious academic journal:

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IMPLICATIONS: "Mutant females lacking serotonergic neurons" showed preferences for females over males. Zhang and company concluded that not having certain neurons that release serotonin "cause[d] a reversal of sexual preference, revealing a role for [serotonin] in regulating sexual preference."

For now this is just an interesting experiment that tells us serotonin plays a role in sexual orientation. Understanding human sexual orientations and proclivities, including the potential ethical discussions that will come with investigating and manipulating genes that influence them, is still a long but interesting way off.


The full study, "Serotonin signaling in the brain of adult female mice is required for sexual preference" is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    


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