Biol Reprod 2009 SSR Annual Meeting Abstracts
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Biology of Reproduction, Vol 37, 1015-1022, Copyright © 1987 by Society for the Study of Reproduction


ARTICLES

Mullerian inhibiting substance in sex-reversed dogs

VN Meyers-Wallen, PK Donahoe, T Manganaro and DF Patterson
Section of Medical Genetics, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104.

In normal males, Mullerian Inhibiting Substance (MIS), produced by testes during an embryonic critical period, is thought to induce regression of the Mullerian duct system, including the oviducts and uterus. In XX sex-reversed dogs, an apparent contradiction has been reported: The uterus persists in the presence of testes or ovotestes. The objective of this study is to determine whether testes of XX male and ovotestes of true hermaphrodite dogs produce MIS, and to examine the anatomy of Mullerian duct derivatives of affected dogs for evidence of regression. Gonadal samples were tested for MIS activity in a bioassay. The mean MIS activity score of XX males was similar to that of normal XY males and significantly greater than that of normal XX females. The mean MIS activity score of XX true hermaphrodites was intermediate between normal XX females and XY males. Within the true hermaphrodite group, ovotestes in which the proportion of testicular tissue was greater than or equal to 1/2 had higher MIS scores than those in which the proportion of testicular tissue was less than 1/2. XX males had a well-developed epididymis adjacent to each testis, but no oviducts. In true hermaphrodites, the oviduct regressed and an epididymis was present when greater than or equal to 1/2 of the adjacent ovotestis was testicular, and MIS activity in that gonad was high. A few ovotestes with intermediate levels of MIS activity had both an oviduct and an epididymis. Regression of the oviductal portion of the Mullerian duct system was positively correlated to the amount of testicular tissue and the MIS activity of the gonad, as would be predicted by Jost's original hypothesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)





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Copyright © 1987 by the Society for the Study of Reproduction.