Not much is known about why supernumerary penises occur, said John Martin, an anatomy professor at the St. Louis University School of Medicine, who was not involved in the case study. Martin and his colleagues teach anatomy using a body-donation program and once discovered that one of their body donors had diphallia, or two penises. The man, who died at age 84, had two full-size phalluses with a urethral opening between them at their base. The donor didn't make any mention of the condition on his body-donation forms. He had two children, Martin said, but the researchers don't know whether they were biological children or whether any reproductive technologies were necessary for the man to have children.
"He died in the early 2000s, so when he was growing up surgery wasn't an option, perhaps," Martin told Live Science. "It's just very different from today where anything like that would have been detected early on and most likely surgery would have been done."
Martin and his colleagues did genetic testing on the donor to see if they could determine the reason for the unusual development. They found several mutations in genes known to be involved in genital development, including some that contribute to forming hairlike structures called cilia on embryonic cells. These cilia are very important in development ... because they flutter in specific directions, wafting proteins toward one side or the other of the developing embryo. Abnormalities in the cilia genes have also been seen in other cases of congenital abnormalities ... such as situs inversus, in which the organs in the torso are flip-flopped so that they are on opposite sides from their normal positions.
The researchers also found mutations in genes that help regulate the activity of other genes in development and in genes involved in receptors for androgens, hormones that have a masculinizing influence and that are involved in genital development. ...
It's not clear how similar the genetics are between different cases of diphallia or whether these findings apply to the one-of-a-kind case of triphallia. ...