The account of "neonatal sterilization" is the story of the advocates of
direct effect of steroids on the gonads and those who believed in the
indirect influence, mediated through the hypothalamus and/or the
pituitary gland. As often happens in biology, both convictions represent
the same image seen from different perspectives. Prof DC Johnson (Kansas
City, KS) reminisced the beginning of the story in a letter to me. I am
paraphrasing parts of the letter with his permission. "As a starting
point we could pick the life-long research of Emil Steinach ... "
Steinach recognized the influence of testes on the develop- ment of
accessory sex organs in 1894, described virilization of females and
feminization of males in 1913, and identified the controlling influence
of the hypophysis on the gonads in 1928. He reviewed his work in a book
Sex and Life, Forty Years of Biological and Medical Experience (E
Steinach and L Loebe!; Faber and Faber, London, 1940). He got on the
wrong road in later years and that is the reason everybody seems to have
forgotten him. He presented his hypothesis that estrogen has a direct
effect upon the testes, i. e. hormone antagonism, at the 1st
International Congress on Sex Research in 1926.