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The Journal of General Physiology logoLink to The Journal of General Physiology
. 1918 Sep 20;1(1):127–131. doi: 10.1085/jgp.1.1.127

LUTEAR CELLS AND HEN-FEATHERING

Alice M Boring 1, T H Morgan 1
PMCID: PMC2140287  PMID: 19871722

Abstract

The experimental evidence had made clear that some substance is produced in the testis of the male Sebright that suppresses in him the development of the secondary sexual plumage of the cock of his species. The detection in his testis of lutear cells like those in hens makes the conclusion highly probable that it is these cells that cause the suppression of cock-feathering in both the Sebright male and in hens of all fowls. Genetic work by Morgan had shown that one or two Mendelian factor-differences are responsible for hen-feathering in the Sebright. These factor-differences produce their effects through the testes. The presence of these genetic factors, we now see, causes the testes of the Sebright to produce a kind of secretory cell that is ordinarily only produced in the female, or possibly to a slight extent in young males (Boring), or in numbers insufficient to suppress the male plumage in the testes of some ordinary cock birds (Reeves).

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