Intersexuality in five pigs, with particular reference to oestrous cycles, the ovotestis, steroid hormone secretion and potential fertility

Abstract
Reproductive tissues, steroid hormone secretion, and sexual behaviour have been examined in five gilts, in each of which the right gonad was an ovotestis. Although from different females, these animals were sired by the same boar and each possessed an XX sex chromosome constitution as determined by karyotype analysis of blood cells. Despite variable amounts of testicular tissue in the ovotestis and unilateral development of a prominent epididymis, four of the animals had oestrous cycles of normal duration (20–22 days) and extended periods of standing oestrus (3–6 days). The fifth animal did not have detectable oestrous cycles but was extremely aggressive in the presence of a mature boar. Two of the gilts were mated, and there were small numbers of embryos in each uterine horn 23 and 26 days later. Removal of the ovary did not prompt compensatory hypertrophy in the ovarian portion of the ovotestis, nor did injection of pregnant mare serum gonadotrophin stimulate detectable follicular growth in ovarian tissue adjoining testicular tissue. Concerning the aetiology of this intersex condition, the unilateral appearance of an ovotestis precludes any simple involvement of a translocated portion of the Y chromosome or systemic effects of unusual titres of the putative H–Y antigen. However, bearing in mind a predisposition to gonadal asymmetry in eutherian mammals, a case is advanced for apposition or incorporation of adrenocortical tissue in the right embryonic ovary. The resultant virilization of neighbouring reproductive tissues would stem from adrenocortical androgen synthesis. J. Endocr. (1985) 106, 233–242

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