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Claus Wedekind

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Claus Wedekind is a Swiss biological researcher famous for his 1995 study that determined a major histocompatibility complex dependent mate preference in humans.[1][2][3] This is often known as the "sweaty t-shirt study". In this study, men wore the same t-shirts for 3 days. These shirts were then put into shoeboxes and various women were instructed to smell the shirts and to indicate which shirts they were most sexually attracted towards. The results showed that women were most attracted to the men with the MHC most dissimilar from their own.

MHC and sexual selection

It has been suggested that MHC plays a role in the selection of potential mates, via olfaction. MHC genes make molecules that enable the immune system to recognise invaders; generally, the more diverse the MHC genes of the parents, the stronger the immune system of the offspring. It would obviously be beneficial, therefore, to have evolved systems of recognizing individuals with different MHC genes and preferentially selecting them to breed with. Yamazaki et al. (1976) showed this to be the case for male mice, who show such a preference for females of different MHC. Similar results have been obtained with fish.[4]

In a 1995 experiment by Wedekind, a group of female college students smelled t-shirts that had been worn by male students for two nights, without deodorant, cologne or scented soaps. Overwhelmingly, the women preferred the odors of men with dissimilar MHCs to their own. However, their preference was reversed if they were taking oral contraceptives. [5] The hypothesis is that MHCs affect mate choice and that oral contraceptives can interfere with this. A study in 2005 showed similar results.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Wedekind, C. et al. (1995). "MHC-dependent preferences in humans." Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 260: 245-49.
  2. ^ *Furlow, Bryant., F. (1996). “The Smell of Love.” Psychology Today Mar/Apr.
  3. ^ Scent of a Man - New Scientist Feb 10, 2001
  4. ^ Boehm T, Zufall F. "MHC peptides and the sensory evaluation of genotype." Trends Neurosci. 2006 Feb;29(2):100-7. PMID 16337283
  5. ^ Wedekind, C. (1995). "MHC-dependent mate preferences in humans". Proc Biol Sci. 260 (1359): 245–249. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ Santos PS, Schinemann JA, Gabardo J, Bicalho Mda G. "New evidence that the MHC influences odor perception in humans: a study with 58 Southern Brazilian students." Horm Behav. 2005 Apr;47(4):384-8. PMID 15777804