Michael R P, Rees H D
Life Sci. 1986 May 5;38(18):1673-7. doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(86)90411-x.
Autoradiography was used to map sites in the primate brain at which testosterone may have sexual differentiating actions on brain function and behavior during fetal development. Two female rhesus monkey fetuses were injected in utero on days 112 and 114 of gestation respectively with 3H-testosterone, and were killed 30 and 60 minutes later. Thaw-mount autoradiography of the brains revealed the accumulation of radioactivity, representing 3H-testosterone or its metabolites, in neurons of the medial preoptic-anterior hypothalamic area, bed nucleus (n.) of the stria terminalis, ventromedial hypothalamic n., and corticomedial amygdala. Thus, it appears that steroid receptors are present in a circumscribed system in the brain of the primate fetus at this stage of development.