Exogenous testosterone administration is associated with differential neural response to unfamiliar peer's and own caregiver's voice in transgender adolescents

Michele Morningstar*, Peyton Thomas, Avery M. Anderson, Whitney I. Mattson, Leena Nahata, Scott Farrell Leibowitz, Diane Chen, John F. Strang, Eric E. Nelson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Changes in gonadal hormones during puberty are thought to potentiate adolescents’ social re-orientation away from caregivers and towards peers. This study investigated the effect of testosterone on neural processing of emotional (vocal) stimuli by unfamiliar peers vs. parents, in transgender boys receiving exogenous testosterone as a gender-affirming hormone (GAH+) or not (GAH-). During fMRI, youth heard angry and happy vocal expressions spoken by their caregiver and an unfamiliar teenager. Youth also self-reported on closeness with friends and parents. Whole-brain analyses (controlling for age) revealed that GAH+ youth showed blunted neural response to caregivers’ angry voices—and heightened response to unfamiliar teenage angry voices—in the anterior cingulate cortex. This pattern was reversed in GAH- youth, who also showed greater response to happy unfamiliar teenager vs. happy caregiver voices in this region. Blunted ACC response to angry caregiver voices—a pattern characteristic of GAH+ youth—was associated with greater relative closeness with friends over parents, which could index more “advanced” social re-orientation. Consistent with models of adolescent neurodevelopment, increases in testosterone during adolescence may shift the valuation of caregiver vs. peer emotional cues in a brain region associated with processing affective information.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number101194
JournalDevelopmental Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume59
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2023

Funding

This work was supported by internal funds in the Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Grant no. RGPIN-2021-03130 ).

Keywords

  • Adolescence
  • Emotional prosody
  • Gender-affirming hormones
  • Social re-orientation
  • Testosterone
  • Transgender

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Cognitive Neuroscience

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