News June
Sexual Orientation of Men Determined Before Birth
A man's sexual orientation appears to be determined in the womb,
a new study suggests.
Past research by Dr. Anthony F. Bogaert of Brock University in
St. Catherines, Ontario and colleagues has shown that the more older
brothers a man has, the more likely he is to be gay. But it has
not been clear if this is a prenatal effect or a psychosocial effect,
related to growing up with older male siblings.
To investigate, Bogaert studied 944 gay and straight men, including
several who were raised with adopted, half- or step-siblings or
were themselves adopted. He reasoned that if the relationship between
having older male siblings and homosexuality was due to family environment
or child-rearing practices, it would be seen whether or not a man's
older brothers were biological or adopted.
Bogaert found that the link between having older brothers and homosexuality
was present only if the siblings were biologically related -- this
relationship was seen between biological brothers who were not raised
together. The amount of time that a man was reared with older brothers
had no association with sexual orientation.
"These results support a prenatal origin to sexual orientation
development in men and indicate that the fraternal birth-order effect
is probably the result of a maternal 'memory' for male gestations
or births," Bogaert writes in his report in PNAS Early Edition.
A woman's body may see a male foetus as "foreign," Bogaert
explains, and her immune response to subsequent male foetuses may
grow progressively stronger.
"If this immune theory were correct, then the link between
the mother's immune reaction and the child's future sexual orientation
would probably be some effect of maternal anti-male antibodies on
the sexual differentiation of the brain," he suggests.
Other lines of research also support the sexual orientation-maternal
immune response link, he notes.
Source http://uk.news.yahoo.com/27062006/325
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