Gatewood Jessica D, Wills Aileen, Shetty Savera, Xu Jun, Arnold Arthur P, Burgoyne Paul S, Rissman Emilie F
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908, USA.
J Neurosci. 2006 Feb 22;26(8):2335-42. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3743-05.2006.
Across human cultures and mammalian species, sex differences can be found in the expression of aggression and parental nurturing behaviors: males are typically more aggressive and less parental than females. These sex differences are primarily attributed to steroid hormone differences during development and/or adulthood, especially the higher levels of androgens experienced by males, which are caused ultimately by the presence of the testis-determining gene Sry on the Y chromosome. The potential for sex differences arising from the different complements of sex-linked genes in male and female cells has received little research attention. To directly test the hypothesis that social behaviors are influenced by differences in sex chromosome complement other than Sry, we used a transgenic mouse model in which gonadal sex and sex chromosome complement are uncoupled. We find that latency to exhibit aggression and one form of parental behavior, pup retrieval, can be influenced by both gonadal sex and sex chromosome complement. For both behaviors, females but not males with XX sex chromosomes differ from XY. We also measured vasopressin immunoreactivity in the lateral septum, which was higher in gonadal males than females, but also differed according to sex chromosome complement. These results imply that a gene(s) on the sex chromosomes (other than Sry) affects sex differences in brain and behavior. Identifying the specific X and/or Y genes involved will increase our understanding of normal and abnormal aggression and parental behavior, including behavioral abnormalities associated with mental illness.
在人类文化和哺乳动物物种中,攻击行为和父母养育行为的表现存在性别差异:雄性通常比雌性更具攻击性且养育行为更少。这些性别差异主要归因于发育过程中和/或成年期的类固醇激素差异,尤其是雄性体内雄激素水平较高,这最终是由Y染色体上睾丸决定基因Sry的存在导致的。雄性和雌性细胞中不同性连锁基因组合所产生的性别差异潜力很少受到研究关注。为了直接验证社会行为受除Sry之外的性染色体组成差异影响这一假设,我们使用了一种性腺性别和性染色体组成解耦的转基因小鼠模型。我们发现,表现出攻击行为的潜伏期以及一种父母行为形式——幼崽找回,会受到性腺性别和性染色体组成的影响。对于这两种行为,具有XX性染色体的雌性而非雄性与XY个体存在差异。我们还测量了外侧隔区的加压素免疫反应性,其在性腺雄性中高于雌性,但也因性染色体组成而异。这些结果表明,性染色体上的一个或多个基因(除Sry外)影响大脑和行为中的性别差异。确定所涉及的特定X和/或Y基因将增进我们对正常和异常攻击行为及父母行为的理解,包括与精神疾病相关的行为异常。