Short winter days may make females more aggressive: study

The study was published in the Proceedings of the Royal Academy B

Update: 2015-11-18 19:47 GMT
Representative image

Washington: Ladies, take note! If you feel unreasonably aggressive during the winters, you may blame it  on your hormones, suggests a new study that found a link  between short winter days and increased aggression in females. 

The study on hamsters, which advances basic knowledge on  the connection between certain sex hormones and aggression,  could go on to advance research on the treatment of  inappropriate aggression in humans, researchers said. 

"The results show for the first time that melatonin acts  directly on the adrenal glands in females to trigger a  'seasonal aggression switch' from hormones in the gonads to  hormones in the adrenal glands - a major contrast to how this  mechanism works in males," said lead author Nikki Rendon, a  PhD student at Indiana University in US.  Melatonin is a hormone that rises in the body during  darkness and lowers during daylight.

The hormone from the  adrenal gland is dehydroepiandrosterone, or DHEA, a sex  steroid shown to affect aggression levels in mammals and  birds, and possibly humans. 

The new study shows that melatonin acts directly on the  adrenal glands in females to trigger the release of DHEA. 

DHEA can be converted to androgens and estrogens, which  affect aggression in both males and females. In females, DHEA  appears to compensate for low levels of estradiol - a form of  estrogen - that occurs during the winter. 

The research was conducted in Siberian hamsters, or  Phodopus sungorus, a species with a similar adrenal system to  humans. 

About 130 hamsters were exposed to long days for a week,  after which 45 were exposed to shorter days for 10 weeks.

A  random subset also received an injection of  Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which is known to trigger  the release of DHEA.  The hamsters were then placed in situations where one  hamster was perceived as an intruder in the other's territory,  sparking aggressive actions and short physical fights. 

The scientists then tracked certain actions, such as the  time until an attack, the number of attacks and the length of  the attacks, to assign an "aggression score." 

The female hamsters exposed to shorter days had increased  levels of both melatonin and DHEA - and higher aggression  scores - along with physical changes in their adrenal glands.  Females exposed to longer days did not experience these  changes, including those that had received an injection of  ACTH.  Collectively, the results show that melatonin is the  primary regulator of aggression in females. 

"It's growing increasingly clear that sex hormones play  an important role in controlling aggression in both males and  females - but females, human and non-human, are traditionally  vastly understudied in the sciences," Rendon said. 

"By conducting this research on females, we are  increasing our understanding of hormones and social behaviour  in a field currently dominated by discussions on testosterone  regulating aggression in males," she said. 

The study was published in the Proceedings of the Royal  Academy B. 

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