In the captivating realm of evolutionary biology, seahorses offer an extraordinary twist to the conventional narrative of reproduction. In these unique creatures, it is the male—not the female—who undertakes the extraordinary task of nurturing offspring to full term. This phenomenon, known as reversed sex roles, challenges long-standing assumptions about reproductive biology and has intrigued scientists worldwide. Recent groundbreaking research led by evolutionary biologist Axel Meyer at the University of Konstanz, in collaboration with colleagues from the South China Sea Institute for Oceanography in Guangzhou, has unveiled the cellular and molecular intricacies that enable this remarkable mode of male pregnancy.
At the heart of this reproductive marvel lies the male seahorse’s brood pouch, an evolutionary innovation unparalleled among vertebrates. Functionally analogous to the uterus and placenta in mammals, this specialized pouch receives eggs deposited by the female and facilitates their fertilization and development. Within the brood pouch, the male provides embryos both oxygen and vital nutrients, nurturing them through gestation until live young seahorses emerge—a process known as viviparity. The structural and functional complexity of the brood pouch is nothing short of evolutionary artistry, signifying a profound departure from the typical oviparous reproduction observed in most fish species.
The research team employed sophisticated comparative genomic analyses, leveraging RNA sequencing at the cellular level to map the molecular landscape of brood pouch development and function. This approach allowed for an unprecedented analysis of gene expression patterns and cellular signaling in male seahorse brood pouches, compared directly with mammalian placentas. Astonishingly, the investigators discovered that, unlike mammalian pregnancy—where female hormones, particularly estrogens and progesterone, govern gestational progression—seahorse male pregnancy relies heavily on androgens, the class of hormones generally associated with male sexual characteristics.
Axel Meyer emphasizes this hormone paradigm shift: “Our findings highlight that male sexual hormones orchestrate the thickening and vascularization of the male seahorse’s abdominal skin layers, facilitating the formation of a placenta-like structure necessary for embryo nourishment.” This androgen-driven mechanism fundamentally contrasts with mammalian reproductive physiology, where pregnancy tissue development and maintenance are hormonally managed through female steroids. The intricate regulation of brood pouch morphology by male hormones not only underscores the plasticity of endocrine systems but also challenges preconceived notions about gender-specific hormonal roles in vertebrate reproduction.
Beyond hormonal control, immune system adaptations were revealed as critical to the success of male pregnancy. In any viviparous context, maintaining immune tolerance toward genetically distinct embryos is essential to prevent immunological rejection. In most viviparous animals, the transcription factor gene foxp3 plays a pivotal role in immune regulation during pregnancy, restraining maternal immune responses against the fetus. Curiously, male seahorses lack the foxp3 gene yet do not mount an autoimmune response that would jeopardize embryo survival. The research team proposes a novel immunoregulatory strategy in male seahorses wherein androgens may act as immunosuppressants, dampening potential immune activation against developing embryos within the pouch environment.
This immunological innovation suggests a dual functionality of androgens in male seahorse pregnancy—not only orchestrating anatomical transformations but simultaneously modulating immune tolerance in an unprecedented fashion. Such a system would represent a sophisticated evolutionary solution balancing the contradictory demands of nurturing developing offspring while preserving the host’s own immune defenses. This adaptation could pave the way for deeper understanding of immune-endocrine crosstalk in reproductive biology and inspire medical insights into immune tolerance mechanisms.
From an evolutionary vantage point, the emergence of male pregnancy in seahorses illuminates the gradual transition from traditional egg-laying (oviparous) ancestors to the modern viviparous state. The Syngnathidae family, encompassing seahorses and their close relatives, presents a continuum of reproductive strategies, making it an ideal model for tracing evolutionary trajectories in reproductive innovation. Initial steps likely involved males carrying externally adhering “sticky eggs,” which gradually evolved into internalized brood pouches capable of safeguarding embryos—markedly enhancing offspring survival rates through increased parental investment.
The genetic and molecular investigations detailed in this study elucidate the cellular pathways and gene regulatory networks involved in brood pouch evolution and function. Through comparative analyses, the research underscores that complex pregnancy structures can arise independently across taxa, achieving similar physiological outcomes via divergent genetic routes—a remarkable case of convergent evolution. Male seahorse pregnancy, governed by androgens and unique immune modulatory pathways, contrasts sharply with female-driven mammalian pregnancy, underscoring the plasticity and diversity of reproductive adaptations in nature.
This research not only enriches our understanding of seahorse biology but also broadly informs evolutionary developmental biology by providing a living example of how reproductive roles and mechanisms can be reshaped across evolutionary timescales. The findings challenge simplistic models of sex and reproduction, highlighting the intricate interplay of genetics, hormones, and immune regulation that underpins reproductive success in diverse vertebrate lineages.
Overall, the study by Meyer and his colleagues exemplifies the power of integrative approaches combining genomics, molecular biology, and evolutionary theory. By deciphering the cellular and molecular underpinnings of male pregnancy in seahorses, the research opens avenues for further exploration of sex-specific reproductive strategies and their evolutionary origins. As male pregnancy evolved independently in seahorses and female mammals, understanding these alternative routes of viviparity reveals nature’s remarkable capacity for innovation.
This research also has potential practical implications. Insights into hormone-driven tissue remodeling and immune tolerance may inspire biomedical advances in reproductive medicine, transplantation biology, and immune therapy. The unprecedented androgen-centric regulatory framework in male seahorse pregnancy challenges biomedical scientists to rethink hormone-immune interactions beyond traditional paradigms steeped in human female physiology.
What remains profoundly captivating is how these diminutive marine creatures embody evolutionary defiance, rewriting the script of reproduction with a strategy that blurs classical boundaries of sex roles and physiology. Male seahorse pregnancy testifies to evolution’s ceaseless creativity, demonstrating how life can adapt and innovate in surprising directions. As researchers continue to unlock the genetic secrets of the brood pouch, our appreciation for the complexity and diversity of life deepens, inspiring curiosity and humility regarding the evolutionary paths that shape existence.
In sum, the male seahorse stands as a symbol of biological ingenuity—where hormones, genes, and immune systems converge in a delicate yet robust dance of life. By exploring this paradigm-shifting reproductive system, science expands the horizons of reproductive biology and evolutionary theory, revealing pathways once thought inaccessible and underscoring the endless potential of nature’s evolutionary experiments.
Subject of Research: Cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying male pregnancy in seahorses, focusing on hormonal regulation and immune tolerance strategies.
Article Title: Cellular and molecular mechanisms of seahorse male pregnancy
News Publication Date: Embargoed until Tuesday, 11 November 2025
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-025-02883-5
References: Yali Liu, Han Jiang, Yuanxiang Miao, Wenli Zhao, Ralf Schneider, Liduo Yin, Xinyue Yu, Haiyan Yu, Xuemei Lu, Enguang Bi, Luonan Chen, Axel Meyer, Qiang Lin, Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2025
Image Credits: Jinggong Zhang (Male Korean seahorse in the act of birth)
Keywords: Evolutionary biology, male pregnancy, viviparity, seahorse, brood pouch, hormonal regulation, androgens, immunotolerance, reproductive evolution, Syngnathidae

