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06/06/2023 10:02

Female scent – accelerated growth in juvenile male mice

Mag. rer. nat. Nina Grötschl Öffentlichkeitsarbeit und Kommunikation
Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien

    Exposing female house mice (Mus musculus) to the scent of male urine is known to accelerate their sexual development in what scientists call the Vandenbergh effect. A recently published study led by the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna now shows that this effect works both ways. The study found that juvenile male mice grew significantly faster when exposed to female urinary scent.

    In their study, the research team tested whether exposing juvenile male mice to female urine influences their growth and the size of their sexual organs. Three-week-old male house mice were exposed to female urine daily 5x/week for about 30 minutes over a period of three months. A control group was exposed to normal water only.

    Faster growth, but no influence on muscle mass or sexual organs
    “We found that males exposed to females grew significantly faster and gained more body mass than control animals, despite all males being reared on the same amount of diet,” says the study’s first author, Sarah M. Zala of Vetmeduni’s Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, “but we detected no differences in males’ muscle mass or sexual organs.” Exposing juvenile males to male urine had no effect on their growth. Last author Dustin J. Penn, also from the Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, highlights the importance of the study: “Our results provide the first evidence to our knowledge that juvenile male mice accelerate their growth when exposed to the urine of adult females.”

    Benefit without compromise: no change in immune resistance
    The researchers also tested whether the males’ accelerated growth involved any functional trade-offs, where one benefit is given up in exchange for another, regarding the males’ immune resistance to an experimental infection. “We exposed juvenile male mice to a bacterial pathogen (Salmonella enterica) but found no evidence that increased growth had negative trade-offs on immune resistance to infectious disease,” says Dustin J. Penn. “Bacterial clearance, body mass or survival during infection were no different when compared to the animals from the control group.”

    Underlying mechanisms still unclear
    The exact mechanisms through which female urine triggers the accelerated growth response in males remains unclear, but an endocrine-mediated puberty acceleration seems conceivable. The new findings could prove useful for future studies aimed at influencing the growth or sexual development of male animals using more natural methods. According to the researchers, further studies are now needed to learn more about the mechanisms behind this effect. This would, for example, help to determine whether and how female urine exposure affects male growth and sexual development in a natural context.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Sarah Zala PhD.
    Konrad-Lorenz-Institut für Vergleichende Verhaltensforschung
    Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien (Vetmeduni)
    Sarah.Zala@vetmeduni.ac.at


    Original publication:

    The article “Female scent accelerates growth of juvenile male mice” by Sarah M. Zala, Brian Church, Wayne K. Potts, Felix Knauer and Dustin J. Penn was published in Scientific Reports. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-34548-3#:~:text=In%20summary%2C%20our...


    More information:

    https://www.vetmeduni.ac.at/en/universitaet/infoservice/presseinformationen/pres...


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, all interested persons
    Biology, Zoology / agricultural and forest sciences
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

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