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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

64, XX, SRY-negative, testicular DSD syndrome in a Lusitano horse.

Journal:
Reproduction in domestic animals = Zuchthygiene
Year:
2013
Authors:
Torres, A et al.
Affiliation:
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A Lusitano horse from Portugal was found to have a rare condition affecting its sexual development. This horse had both female and male characteristics, including mammary glands and testes located in the abdomen, along with a penis-like structure that was functioning for urination and erection. Despite having low testosterone levels and a genetic makeup that typically indicates a female (64, XX, SRY-negative), the horse displayed aggressive male behaviors. The treatment involved surgery to remove the abdominal testes and to adjust the position of the urethra. The case highlights the complexity of sexual development and suggests that there are still unknown factors influencing how gonads form.

Abstract

Here is reported a disorder of sex development found in the Portuguese Lusitano horse breed. The complex genital phenotype included mammary glands, abdominal testes without epididymis, connected through oviducts to pelvic hypoplastic uterine horns and fused vulvar labia majora from which protruded ventrally a penis-like structure. This structure was presented in a reversed position, the urethral opening placed dorsally in the glans. However, it was functional both for micturition and erection. The horse exhibited female micturition posture and aggressive male-like behaviour, including flehmen, mounting, thrusting and flagging of the tail. Plasma testosterone concentrations were below detection limits and the genetic evaluation revealed a 64, XX, SRY-negative karyotype. Surgery consisted in the removal of abdominal gonads followed by amputation of the penis and repositioning of the urethra. This case of reversion between the chromosomal and gonadal sex, associated with mixed anatomical and behavioural phenotype, illustrates that development of the testes may occur in the absence of the SRY gene and that other genetic and cellular pathways leading to gonad differentiation should be investigated.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23057740/