Morphometric analysis of the development of sexual dimorphism of the mouse pelvis

Abstract
Sex differences in the innominate bone of C57BL/Tw mice were studied morphometrically from the day of birth to 120 days of age. In neonatal male and female mice, a small cartilaginous spine was found on the basal part of ischium. This process disappeard in males within 24 hours after birth, whereas in females it remained until at least 30 days. Other sexual differences in the pubis and the ischium appeared at 30 and 120 days, respectively. The pubis in female mice was longer and thinner than that in the males, and the ischium in male mice was shorter and thicker than that in the females. Thirty-day-old female mice treated neonatally with testosterone or 5α-dihydrotestosterone possessed public bones shorter and thicker than those to the age-matched untreated females. Pubes in male mice castrated at the day of birth were thinner than those in intact males. These findings suggest that the shape of the innominate bone is transformed to the male type under the influence of early postnatal androgen.