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Reproductive behavior: Sexuality and physiology

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Puberty. Adulthood. Hormones in sexual development ... Hormones and puberty. Timing by the hypothalamus SCN. Anterior pituitary and growth hormone ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reproductive behavior: Sexuality and physiology


1
Reproductive behavior Sexuality and physiology
  • Hormones
  • Organs
  • Hypothalamus

2
Hormones
  • Neurotransmitters
  • Neuromodulators or autacoids
  • Hormones act on receptors
  • Amino acid-based hormones
  • Peptides and polypeptide proteins
  • Steroids, from cholesterol
  • Pheromones

3
Sex hormones
  • Sex hormones are steroids
  • In addition to acting on surface receptors,
    steroids are fat-soluble and can enter cells to
    bind with internal receptors, even in the nucleus
  • Secreted by gonads and adrenal cortex, triggered
    by hypothalamus via the pituitary

4
Estrogens and androgens
  • Gonads and adrenal cortex of both genders secrete
    both The difference is in the relative amounts
  • Testosterone and estradiol
  • Progestins Progesterone
  • Anterior pituitary Gonadotropins and ACTH
  • Posterior pituitary ADH and oxytocin

5
Hypothalamic control
  • Hypothalamus controls posterior pituitary through
    neurohormones released from axon terminals in PP
  • Hypothalamus controls anterior pituitary through
    releasing hormones secreted into a portal vein
    system.

6
Sexual effects of hormones
  • Fetal development
  • Perinatal development
  • Puberty
  • Adulthood

7
Hormones in sexual development
  • Primordial gonads or fetal gonadal anlage are
    hermaphroditic Medulla becomes testes, cortex
    becomes ovaries.
  • SRY gene on Y chromosome causes H-Y antigen to be
    synthesized, leading to development of medulla.

8
Reproductive tracts
  • Mullerian and Wolffian tissue develop under
    hormonal control
  • Testosterone triggers Wolffian development, MIS
    inhibits Mullerian development
  • Mullerian tissue develops by default unless MIS
    is present

9
Other differentiation effects
  • The external genitals develop in two different
    pathways from the same tissue, influenced by
    testosterone
  • Some brain structures develop different sizes or
    activity levels
  • Hypothalamus, corpus callosum, anterior
    commissure, thalamus, planum temporale
  • Temporal lobe and limbic system (more active in
    men) cingulate gyrus (more active in women)

10
Brain effects of hormones
  • During early development, testosterone affects
    the hypothalamus by turning off the cycling
    pattern of gonadotropin release.
  • Testosterone acts on brain cells only after it is
    aromatized inside cells to estradiol, which then
    masculinizes the cells.

11
More on brain effects
  • Estradiol in the mothers blood is kept from the
    rat fetus by being bound by alpha fetoprotein in
    humans by the placental barrier.
  • Synthetic estrogens, like DES, can cross the
    placental barrier, causing some masculinization
    in female children.

12
Sexual effects of hormones
  • Fetal development
  • Perinatal development
  • Puberty
  • Adulthood

13
Behavioral effects of hormones
  • In females
  • In animal studies, perinatal testosterone
    treatment and ovariectomy leads to masculine
    sexual patterns (mounting) when testosterone is
    added at maturity.
  • When injected with progesterone and estradiol,
    they showed less female sexual response
    (lordosis).

14
Sexual effects of hormones
  • Fetal development
  • Perinatal development
  • Puberty
  • Adulthood

15
Hormones and puberty
  • Timing by the hypothalamus SCN
  • Anterior pituitary and growth hormone
  • Gonadotropic and adrenocorticotropic hormones
    trigger greater increases in either androgens or
    estrogens, but both are secreted in increased
    amounts by both genders, eg. androstenedione

16
Exceptional development
  • Hermaphroditism
  • Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome
  • No receptors for androgens
  • Adrenogenital Syndrome
  • Insufficient cortisol to inhibit adrenal androgen
  • Sex reassignment

17
Sexual effects of hormones
  • Fetal development
  • Perinatal development
  • Puberty
  • Adulthood

18
Hormones and adults
  • Male sexual capacity and behavior relate to
    testosterone levels
  • Castration reduces sex drive and potency
  • Replacement testosterone increases sex drive and
    potency in men with a testosterone deficiency
    castrati and elderly
  • Healthy males are unaffected by additional
    testosterone. They already have plenty.

19
Sexual hormones in adult females
  • Sexual hormones do control the estrus cycle,
    which is related to sexual activity, and the
    menstrual cycle, which is not.
  • Ovariectomy does not reduce sex drive, if the
    consequent lack of lubrication is compensated.
  • Sexual interest appears to be controlled by
    testosterone.

20
Other hormone effects
  • Social-cognitive functioning (Macrae et al., 2002)
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