NY Times, May 10, 2005
Gay Men Are Found to Have Different Scent of Attraction
By NICHOLAS WADE

Using a brain imaging technique, Swedish researchers have shown that
homosexual and heterosexual men respond differently to two odors that may be
involved in sexual arousal, and that the gay men respond in the same way as
women.

The new research may open the way to studying human pheromones, as well as
the biological basis of sexual preference. Pheromones, chemicals emitted by
one individual to evoke some behavior in another of the same species, are
known to govern sexual activity in animals, but experts differ as to what
role, if any, they play in making humans sexually attractive to one another.

The new research, which supports the existence of human pheromones, is
reported in today's issue of The Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences by Dr. Ivanka Savic and colleagues at the Karolinska Institute in
Stockholm.

The two chemicals in the study were a testosterone derivative produced in
men's sweat and an estrogen-like compound in women's urine, both of which
have long been suspected of being pheromones.

Most odors cause specific smell-related regions of the human brain to light
up when visualized by a form of brain imaging that tracks blood flow in the
brain and therefore, by inference, sites where neurons are active. Several
years ago, Dr. Savic and colleagues showed that the two chemicals activated
the brain in a quite different way from ordinary scents.

The estrogen-like compound, though it activated the usual smell-related
regions in women, lighted up the hypothalamus in men. This is a region in
the central base of the brain that governs sexual behavior and, through its
control of the pituitary gland lying just beneath it, the hormonal state of
the body.

The male sweat chemical, on the other hand, did just the opposite; it
activated mostly the hypothalamus in women and the smell-related regions in
men. The two chemicals seemed to be leading a double life, playing the role
of odor with one sex and of pheromone with another.

The Swedish researchers have now repeated the experiment but with the
addition of gay men as a third group. The gay men responded to the two
chemicals in the same way as did women, Dr. Savic reports, as if the
hypothalamus's response is determined not by biological sex but by the
owner's sexual orientation.

Dr. Savic said that she had also studied gay women, but that the data were
"somewhat complicated" and not yet ready for publication.

The finding is similar to a report in 1991 by Dr. Simon LeVay that a small
region of the hypothalamus is twice as large in straight men as in women or
gay men. The brain scanning technique used by the Swedish researchers lacks
the resolution to see the region studied by Dr. LeVay, which is a mere
millimeter or so across. But both findings suggest that the hypothalamus is
organized in a way related to sexual orientation.

The new finding, if confirmed, would break ground in two important
directions, those of human pheromones and human sexuality.

Mice are known to influence each other's sexual behavior through emission of
chemicals that act like hormones on the recipient's brain and so are known
as pheromones. Hopes by the fragrance industry, among others, of finding
human pheromones were dashed several years ago when it emerged that a tiny
structure in the nose through which mice detect many pheromones, the
vomeronasal organ, is largely inactive in humans, having lost its nervous
connection with the brain.

Researchers interpreted that to mean that humans, as they evolved to rely on
sight more than smell, had no need of the primitive cues that pass for
sexual attractiveness in mice. But a role for human pheromones could not be
ruled out, especially in light of findings that women living or working
together tend to synchronize their menstrual cycles.

Some researchers see Dr. Savic's work as strong evidence in favor of human
pheromones. "The question of whether human pheromones exist has been
answered. They do," wrote the authors of a commentary in Neuron about Dr.
Savic's report of 2001.

Dr. Catherine Dulac, a Harvard University biologist who studies pheromones
in mice, said that if a chemical modified the function of the hypothalamus,
that might be enough to regard it as a pheromone. She said the Swedish study
was extremely interesting, even though "humans are a terrible experimental
subject." She noted, however, that the researchers used a far higher dose of
the armpit chemical than anyone would be exposed to in normal life.

If human pheromones do exist, Dr. Savic's approach may allow insights into
how the brain is organized not just for sexual orientation but also for
sexuality in general.

"The big question is not where homosexuality comes from, but where does
sexuality come from," said Dr. Dean Hamer, a geneticist at the National
Institutes of Health.

The different pattern of activity that Dr. Savic sees in the brains of gay
men could be either a cause of their sexual orientation or an effect of it.
If sexual orientation has a genetic cause, or is influenced by hormones in
the womb or at puberty, then the neurons in the hypothalamus could wire
themselves up in a way that permanently shapes which sex a person is
attracted to.

Alternatively, Dr. Savic's finding could be just a consequence of straight
and gay men's using their brain in different ways.

"We cannot tell if the different pattern is cause or effect," Dr. Savic
said. "The study does not give any answer to these crucial questions."

But the technique might provide an answer, Dr. Hamer noted, if it were
applied to people of different ages to see when in life the different
pattern of response developed.

Dr. LeVay said he believed from animal experiments that the size differences
in the hypothalamic region he had studied arose before birth, perhaps in
response to differences in the circulating level of sex hormones. Both his
finding and Dr. Savic's suggest that the hypothalamus is specifically
organized in relation to sexual orientation, he said.

Some researchers believe there is likely to be a genetic component of
homosexuality because of its concordance among twins. The occurrence of male
homosexuality in both members of a twin pair is 22 percent in nonidentical
twins but rises to 52 percent in identical twins.

Gay men have fewer children, meaning that in Darwinian terms, any genetic
variant that promotes homosexuality should be quickly eliminated from the
population. Dr. Hamer believes that such genes may nevertheless persist
because, although in men they reduce the number of descendants, in women
they act to increase fertility.



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