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Early pregnancy’s first trimester may fuel human brain evolution

July 7, 2026
in Biology
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Early pregnancy’s first trimester may fuel human brain evolution

Early pregnancy’s first trimester may fuel human brain evolution

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A mother’s biology during the earliest weeks of pregnancy may quietly shape the future intellect of her child, according to a new investigation that links first-trimester sex hormones to newborn head circumference—a reliable proxy for brain size and later cognitive ability. The study, a collaboration between Swansea University and the Medical University of Lodz, moves beyond indirect markers like finger length ratios and directly measures maternal blood hormone concentrations, revealing that prenatal oestrogen is a powerful predictor of how large a baby’s head will be at birth.

For decades, researchers have used the 2D:4D digit ratio—the relative length of the index finger to the ring finger—as a retrospective window into the hormonal environment of the womb. High prenatal oestrogen relative to testosterone tends to produce a longer index finger and, intriguingly, a larger head circumference in newborns. This indirect evidence has long hinted that oestrogen exposure in the first trimester, when the brain’s fundamental architecture is being laid down, might be a key driver of encephalization. But until now, no one had tested this directly by tracking hormone levels in maternal blood during the critical period of organogenesis and correlating them with the baby’s head size at delivery.

The research team, led by digit ratio expert Professor John Manning of Swansea’s A-STEM research group, recruited 47 mother-baby pairs and measured maternal oestrogen concentrations between the sixth and eighth weeks of gestation. This window is particularly significant because it coincides with the closure of the neural tube and the explosive proliferation of neural progenitor cells that will eventually give rise to the cerebral cortex. When the babies were born, the researchers recorded their head circumference and analysed the relationship with those early hormonal snapshots. The results were striking: maternal oestrogen levels at six to eight weeks post-conception positively predicted newborn head circumference, and the effect was markedly stronger in male infants than in female ones.

The sex-specific nature of the finding adds a fascinating layer of complexity. Male fetuses are known to be more sensitive to perturbations in the intrauterine environment, and their brains undergo a slightly different trajectory of development under the influence of both maternal and fetal hormones. The study suggests that oestrogen of maternal origin may act on the male brain through oestrogen receptors that are abundantly expressed in the developing hypothalamus and hippocampus, regions critical for memory, learning, and emotional regulation. The amplified effect in boys could reflect a higher density of these receptors or a downstream interaction with the androgen signalling pathways that are already diverging between the sexes at this early stage.

Professor Manning and his colleagues argue that these findings feed directly into a provocative evolutionary framework known as the oestrogenised ape hypothesis. This idea posits that the remarkable increase in hominin brain size over the past two million years was driven, at least in part, by a gradual elevation of oestrogen activity in our lineage. The fossil record shows that as brains expanded, the human body also became more feminised—males exhibit less robust brow ridges and smaller canine teeth compared to our australopithecine ancestors, traits consistent with higher oestrogen signalling. The new data provide a mechanistic link: if maternal oestrogen can boost infant brain size, then selection for larger-brained offspring would simultaneously favour mothers with higher circulating oestrogen during early pregnancy, inadvertently dragging along a suite of oestrogen-driven physical changes.

However, the evolutionary bargain comes with a biological cost. The same study points out that high prenatal oestrogen exposure in males is associated with a higher risk of cardiovascular abnormalities later in life and reduced sperm quality. In essence, the drive for a bigger brain may have exacted a toll on male reproductive fitness, creating an evolutionary trade-off that persists in modern populations. The Swansea team’s findings thus illuminate not just a developmental mechanism but a deep-seated tension in human biology: the very hormone that helps build a more capable brain may simultaneously undermine the robustness of the male reproductive system.

The technical methodology of the study is noteworthy for its directness. Previous work relied heavily on the 2D:4D ratio as a proxy, but digit ratio is influenced by a complex interplay of prenatal and postnatal factors, and its interpretation has been controversial. By measuring serum oestradiol and other sex steroids in maternal blood, the researchers bypassed many of these confounds. The blood samples were collected during routine antenatal visits, and hormone concentrations were quantified using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, the gold standard for steroid measurement. The head circumference data were obtained from standardised neonatal anthropometric assessments performed by trained midwives unaware of the hormone data, minimising bias.

The implications of this research stretch beyond evolutionary theory. If first-trimester oestrogen levels can influence brain growth, then factors that disrupt the maternal endocrine system—such as endocrine-disrupting chemicals found in plastics, certain medications, or maternal stress—could have lasting consequences for neurodevelopment. The study opens the door to the possibility that monitoring and perhaps modulating early pregnancy hormone profiles might one day be used to optimise conditions for fetal brain development, though the authors caution that such applications are still speculative and require extensive further investigation.

The study, published in the journal Early Human Development, is based on a modest sample size, and the researchers acknowledge that larger, more diverse cohorts will be needed to confirm the findings and explore the underlying molecular pathways. Nevertheless, the work represents a significant step forward in our understanding of how the invisible chemical dialogue between mother and fetus shapes the organ that most defines our species. It reminds us that the roots of human intelligence are planted extraordinarily early, in a hormonal soil that we are only beginning to map.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: First trimester maternal sex steroids and head circumference in newborns
News Publication Date: 12-Jun-2026
Web References: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378378226001295
References: 10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2026.106604
Image Credits: Not available
Keywords: prenatal oestrogen, head circumference, digit ratio, 2D:4D, brain size, maternal hormones, first trimester, oestrogenised ape hypothesis, human evolution, neurodevelopment

Tags: 2D:4D digit ratiocognitive ability biomarkersearly pregnancy cognitionencephalization during pregnancyfetal brain growthfirst trimester brain developmenthuman brain evolutionmaternal blood hormonesnewborn head circumferenceorganogenesis hormone exposureprenatal oestrogen levelsprenatal sex hormones
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