Site of male sexual desire uncovered in brain -- Gene in brain tissue regulates sexual behavior in males in mouse study
From
Northwestern University
CHICAGO
--- The locus of male sexual desire has been uncovered in specific regions of
brain tissue where a key gene named aromatase is present, reports a new
Northwestern Medicine study in mice.
The
gene regulates sexual behavior in men, and thus can be targeted by drugs to
either increase its function for low sexual desire or decrease its function for
compulsive sexual desire, scientists said. Aromatase converts testosterone to
estrogen in the brain, which drives male sexual activity.
The
study was published Sept. 10 in the journal Endocrinology.
Aromatase's
full function in the adult brain had not previously been known.
"This
is the first key finding to explain how testosterone stimulates sexual
desire," said senior author Dr. Serdar Bulun, chair of obstetrics and
gynecology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and Northwestern
Medicine. "For the first time, we demonstrated conclusively that the
conversion of testosterone to estrogen in the brain is critical to maintain
full sexual activity or desire in males. Aromatase drives that."
When
Northwestern scientists knocked out aromatase selectively in the brain, sexual
activity in male mice decreased by 50%, despite their having higher levels of
blood testosterone levels (compared with control male mice).
"Male
mice partially lost interest in sex," said corresponding study author Dr.
Hong Zhao, research associate professor in obstetrics and gynecology at
Feinberg. "Aromatase is the key enzyme for estrogen production. Estrogen
has functions in males and females. Testosterone has to be converted to
estrogen to drive sexual desire in males."
If
a normal male mouse is put with a female one, Bulun said, "it would chase
after her and try to have sex with her. If you knock out the aromatase gene in
the brain, their sexual activity is significantly reduced. There is less
frequency of mating. The male mice are not that interested."
The
finding can contribute to new treatments for disorders of sexual desire, the
scientists said.
Low
sexual desire, clinically known as hypoactive sexual desire disorder, is a
common condition and can be a side effect of widely used medications such as a
category of antidepressants known as SSRIs. A treatment to boost aromatase in
this disorder could heighten sexual desire, Bulun said.
On
the flip side, compulsive sexual desire is another condition that can be
treated by an existing systemic aromatase inhibitor, but that treatment has
side effects such as osteoporosis. Now, new selective drugs that suppress only
the brain promoter region of the aromatase gene can be developed, Bulun said.
These new selective medications would not cause the side effects of the
currently existing aromatase inhibitors.
https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-09/nu-som091120.php
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