Scientists demystify male puberty
Wednesday March 16, 2011 11:05:06 AM,
IANS
|
Sydney: Why do some
boys reach puberty early while the rest enjoy the idyllic bliss of
childhood much longer? Scientists may have identified the answer -
a protein called SMAD3.
The key to their findings lies with SMAD3 and the rate at which it
is produced.
Associate Professor Kate Loveland and Catherine Itman from Monash
University in Australia have discovered that half as much SMAD3
protein results in faster maturation than the norm, and an
inability to create SMAD3 results in abnormal responses to
testosterone.
"SMAD3 is a protein that translates signals from the environment
outside the cell to the nucleus, where it switches genes on or
off," Itman said, according to the journal Endocrinology.
"We have been investigating how SMAD3 influences the growth of
testis cells and their ability to respond to testosterone," she
said.
Puberty begins when the body starts to produce large amounts of
hormone testosterone. Early puberty involves the onset of puberty
before eight years of age and affects around 1 in 10,000 boys,
according to a Monash statement.
On the other hand, puberty is delayed when testis cells cannot
respond normally to testosterone.
Altered timing of puberty has implications in adulthood, with
precocious puberty linked to reduced adult height and delayed
puberty associated with reduced bone density.
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