Steroid-independent male sexual behavior in B6D2F2 male mice |
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Affiliation: | 1. Key Laboratory of Nuclear Resources and Environment, Ministry of Education, East China University of Technology, Nanchang, Jiangxi, 330013, China;2. National Deep Sea Center, Qingdao, Shandong, 266061, China;3. College of Marine Geoscience, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, Shandong, 266061, China;4. Fundamental Science on Radioactive Geology and Exploration Technology Laboratory, East China University of Technology, Nanchang, Jiangxi, 330013, China;5. Geological Party No. 216 BOG CNNC, Wulumuqi, Xinjiang, 830011, China;1. University of California, Davis, Department of Psychology, Davis, CA, USA;2. California National Primate Research Center, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA;3. New York University, Department of Anthropology, New York, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | It is well established that male sexual behavior (MSB) is regulated by gonadal steroids; however, individual differences in MSB, independent of gonadal steroids, are prevalent across a wide range of species, and further investigation is necessary to advance our understanding of steroid-independent MSB. Studies utilizing B6D2F1 hybrid male mice in which a significant proportion retain MSB after long-term orchidectomy, identified as steroid-independent-maters (SI-maters), have begun to unravel the genetic underpinnings of steroid-independent MSB. A recent study demonstrated that steroid-independent MSB is a heritable behavioral phenotype that is mainly passed down from B6D2F1 hybrid SI-maters when crossed with C57BL6J female mice. To begin to uncover whether the strain of the dam plays a role in the inheritance of steroid-independent MSB, B6D2F1 hybrid females were crossed with B6D2F1 hybrid males. While the present study confirms the finding that steroid-independent MSB is a heritable behavioral phenotype and that SI-mater sires are more likely to pass down some components of MSB than SI-non-maters to their offspring, it also reveals that the B6D2F2 male offspring that were identified as SI-maters that displayed the full repertoire of steroid-independent MSB had the same probability of being sired from either a B6D2F1 SI-mater or SI-non-mater. These results, in conjunction with previous findings, indicate that the specific chromosomal loci pattern that codes for steroid-independent MSB in the B6D2F2 male offspring may result regardless of whether the father was a SI-mater or SI-non-mater, and that the maternal strain may be an important factor in the inheritance of steroid-independent MSB. |
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