Social selection favours offspring prone to the development of androgenetic alopecia

A. Goren, J. Shapiro, T. Naccarato, M. Situm, M. Kovacevic, N. Lonky, T. Lotti, J. McCoy

Article ID: 4396
Vol 31, Issue 4, 2017
DOI: https://doi.org/10.54517/jbrha4396
Received: 8 January 2018; Accepted: 8 January 2018; Available online: 8 January 2018; Issue release: 8 January 2018

Abstract

In recent years, dermatologists have observed an increase in the incidence of male androgenetic alopecia (AGA). In a survey of 41 dermatologists, 88% reported an increase in incidence of AGA in men younger than 30 years. This phenomenon has no apparent explanation. However, due to the strong genetic inheritance component of AGA, a social or environmental factor which favours the inheritance of genes that increase the risk of developing AGA is suspected. To date, the strongest predictor of AGA in men has been the length of the CAG repeat located in the androgen receptor gene (AR gene) on the X chromosome. The same genetic variant in women is associated with ovulation at a later age, higher antral follicle count, and lower risk for premature ovarian failure. This led us to theorize that, due to social pressure to conceive later in life, women carriers of the short CAG repeat in the AR gene would have a selective advantage to conceive later in life and would thus favour male offspring exhibiting AGA


Keywords

androgenetic alopecia;androgen receptor;fertility


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