Referrals for gender dysphoria (GD), characterized by a distressful incongruence between gender identity and at-birth assigned sex, are steadily increasing. The underlying neurobiology, and the mechanisms of the often-beneficial cross-sex hormone treatment are unknown. Here, we test hypothesis that own body perception networks (incorporated in the default mode network-DMN, and partly in the salience network-SN), are different in trans-compared with cis-gender persons. We also investigate whether these networks change with cross-sex hormone treatment. Forty transmen (TrM) and 25 transwomen (TrW) were scanned before and after cross-sex hormone institution. We used our own developed Body Morph test (BM), to assess the perception of own body as self. Fifteen cisgender persons were controls. Within and between-group differences in functional connectivity were calculated using independent components analysis within the DMN, SN, and motor network (a control network). Pretreatment, TrM and TrW scored lower "self" on the BM test than controls. Their functional connections were weaker in the anterior cingulate-, mesial prefrontal-cortex (mPFC), precuneus, the left angular gyrus, and superior parietal cortex of the DMN, and ACC in the SN "Self" identification and connectivity in the mPFC in both TrM and TrW increased from scan 1 to 2, and at scan 2 no group differences remained. The neurobiological underpinnings of GD seem subserved by cerebral structures composing major parts of the DMN.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-80687-2 | DOI Listing |
Pharmaceutics
February 2025
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy, University of the Pacific, Stockton, CA 95211, USA.
Kidney proton- and sodium-dependent monocarboxylate transporters (MCT/SMCT) are involved in the renal reabsorption of substrates, and thus factors involved in their regulation may have pharmacokinetic implications. Previous studies have demonstrated sex hormone-dependent regulation of MCTs and SMCTs in tissues involved in drug disposition. The present study evaluates the impact of puberty on renal MCT/SMCT expression with ovariectomy and castration conducted before puberty, removing the initial exposure to sex hormones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypertension
February 2025
Department of Physiology and Biophysics (J.H.M., B.F.C., A.Z.R., K.C., A.T.W., B.T.A.), University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson.
Background: Transgender women are individuals born male but identify as female. Many transgender women undergo gender-affirming hormone therapy to alleviate the distress that can occur due to gender incongruence. For transgender women, gender-affirming hormone therapy includes 17β-estradiol (E2) combined with an antiandrogen therapy (AA) or surgical intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Sex Differ
October 2024
Bioinformatics Section, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, 510515, China.
Background: Gene expression shows sex bias in the brain as it does in other organs. Since female and male humans exhibit noticeable differences in emotions, logical thinking, movement, spatial orientation, and even the incidence of neurological disorders, sex biases in the brain are especially interesting, but how they are determined, whether they are conserved or lineage specific, and what the consequences of the biases are, remain poorly explored and understood.
Methods: Based on RNA-seq datasets from 16 and 14 brain regions in humans and macaques across developmental periods and from patients with brain diseases, we used linear mixed models (LMMs) to differentiate variations in gene expression caused by factors of interest and confounding factors and identify four types of sex-biased genes.
Int J Transgend Health
December 2023
Claude Bernard University Lyon 1, Lyon, France.
Introduction: Gynecological primary care is a public health issue, however, there is no French data on the transmasculine population, despite identified needs and a low coverage rate described in the international literature. The objective was to analyze the access of the French transmasculine population to gynecological primary care.
Methods: The study "Trans men and Transmasculine non-binary individuals use and access to prevention and sexual health care 2022" is a non-interventional, self-administrated, anonymous online study targeting transmasculine adults living in France.
J Voice
October 2024
Endocrine Institute, Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
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