Human sexual differentiation is a critical process whereby a strict dimorphism is established that enables future reproductive
success as phenotypic males and females. Significant components of this differentiation pathway unfold during the first three
months of gestation when they are sensitive to disruption by abnormal hormonal influences. Excessive exposure of female development
to androgens in conditions such as congenital adrenal hyperplasia causes virilization. However, recently we have suggested
that female development normally takes place in the presence of low, yet significant, levels of androgen, implying a need
for strict regulation to avoid virilization and the potential for a biological role of androgens in females that has not been
fully elucidated. Here, we review androgen-dependent male differentiation of the external genitalia in humans, and link this
to current understanding of female development and steroidogenesis in the developing adrenal cortex.
Keywords Human - Fetal - Adrenal - Sex differentiation - Androgen