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While cell autonomous sex identity emphasizes the intrinsic sex-specific properties of individual cells, the interplay between CASI and hormonal influences plays a critical role in shaping an organism's overall sexual phenotype. CASI and hormones are not mutually exclusive but instead represent complementary mechanisms of sexual differentiation.
The Organizational-Activational Hypothesis states that steroid hormones permanently organize the nervous system during early development, which is reflected in adult male or female typical behaviors. [1] In adulthood, the same steroid hormones activate, modulate, and inhibit these behaviors.
The optimality hypothesis states too much variability in the MHC can result in a failure of T-cells to distinguish themselves non-selves, and thereby increase the risk of autoimmune disease. This would confer greater fitness to individuals without a large degree MHC diversity. [6] [13] Autoimmune diseases are associated with MHC loci. In humans ...
Sexual selection is a biological way one sex chooses a mate for the best reproductive success. Most compete with others of the same sex for the best mate to contribute their genome for future generations. This has shaped human evolution for many years, but reasons why humans choose their mates are not fully understood.
In humans, barring intersex conditions causing aneuploidy and other unusual states, it is the male that is heterogametic, with XY sex chromosomes.. Haldane's rule is an observation about the early stage of speciation, formulated in 1922 by the British evolutionary biologist J. B. S. Haldane, that states that if — in a species hybrid — only one sex is inviable or sterile, that sex is more ...
Afterwards, the hypothesis was formulated in terms of population genetics by Fisher (1930) [12] and Muller (1932) [13] and with greater mathematical formalism, by Muller (1958, 1964) [14] [15] and Crow and Kimura (1965). [16] The doubts about the validity of the Vicar of Bray hypothesis caused the upcoming of alternative hypotheses such as:
Bogaert's hypothesis argues that "the target of the immune response may be male specific molecules on the surface of male fetal brain cells (e.g., including those in the anterior hypothalamus). Anti-male antibodies might bind to these molecules and thus interfere with their role in normal sexual differentiation, leading some later born males to ...
Other evidence supporting the role of testosterone and prenatal hormones in sexual orientation development include observations of male subjects with cloacal exstrophy who were sex-assigned as female during birth only later to declare themselves male. This supports the theory that the prenatal testosterone surge is crucial for gender identity ...