ABSTRACT
Sex differences in the size of key limbic nuclei have been found in many species. In some of these species, steroid hormones have been implicated in both the development and the maintenance of the sex difference. However, the possible role of sex-specific genes has not been examined, in part due to lack of an appropriate model system. In this study we measured the size of the ventromedial hypothalamus and preoptic area-anterior hypothalamus in normal female whiptail lizards and in genetic female whiptails that had been sex-reversed by treatment early in development with the aromatase inhibitor fadrozole. We found no difference in the size of these two nuclei between females and the sex-reversed animals. These results suggest that either the sex-reversing treatment itself interfered with the masculinization process, or that a male genome is required to produce a male-like limbic phenotype.