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Meyers-Wallen VN 《Theriogenology》2006,66(6-7):1655-1658
The genomic revolution is beginning to facilitate advances in canine and feline medicine, as illustrated in our research. Our studies are focused upon identifying the gene mutation that causes canine Sry-negative XX sex reversal, a disorder of sex determination in which chromosomal females (78,XX) develop testicular tissue, becoming either XX true hermaphrodites with ovotestes, or XX males with bilateral testes. A genome-wide screen, using mapped markers in our pedigree of Sry-negative XX sex reversed dogs founded upon the American cocker spaniel, identified five chromosomal regions in which the causative gene may be located. The canine genome was used to identify the canine homologue of goat Pisrt1 and so determine that canine and caprine Sry-negative XX sex reversal are genetically heterogeneous. A second goal of our research is to determine the molecular mechanism by which the mutation causes testis induction. Thus far, we have reported gonadal Sry and Sox9 expression patterns in normal embryos, which have temporal and spatial patterns similar to those reported in humans, sheep, and pigs. Once gene mutations causing such inherited disorders are identified, DNA tests will become a part of general veterinary practice, advancing both diagnostic techniques and preventative medicine.  相似文献   

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Canine Sry-negative XX sex reversal is a disorder of gonadal development wherein individuals having a female karyotype develop testes or ovotestes. In this study, linkage mapping was undertaken in a pedigree derived from one proven carrier American cocker spaniel founder male and beagle females. All affected dogs in the analysis were XX true hermaphrodites and confirmed to be Sry negative by polymerase chain reaction. A genome-wide linkage screen conducted using 245 microsatellite markers revealed highest LOD score of 3.4 (marker CPH9) on CFA29. Fine mapping with additional microsatellites in the region containing CPH9 localized the Sry-negative XX sex reversal locus to a 5.4-Mb candidate region between markers CPH9 and FH3003 (LOD score 3.15). Insignificant LOD scores were found at genome-wide screen or fine mapping markers that were within 10 Mb of 45 potential candidate genes reported to have a role in mammalian sex determination or differentiation. Together, these results suggest that a novel locus on CFA29 may be responsible for sex reversal in this pedigree.  相似文献   

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The relationship between cryptorchidism and testicular tumors has been well established in canines, and the tumor has been proposed as a model for studying its human counterparts. Herein we report canine malignant retroperitoneal seminoma in a 4-year-old castrated Basset hound, most likely without testicular involvement, similar to that of the classic seminoma of humans.  相似文献   

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Summary: The her-1 regulatory switch gene in C. elegans sex determination is normally active in XO animals, resulting in male development, and inactive in XX animals, allowing hermaphrodite development. The her-1(n695gf) mutation results in the incomplete transformation of XX animals into phenotypic males. We describe four extragenic mutations that suppress the masculinized phenotype of her-1(n695gf) XX. They define two previously undescribed genes, sup-26 and sup-27. All four mutations exhibit semidominance of suppression and by themselves have no visible effects on sex determination in otherwise genotypically wild-type XX or XO animals. Analysis of interactions with mutations in the major sex-determining genes show that sup-26 and sup-27 influence sex determination in fundamentally different ways. sup-26 appears to act independently of her-1 to negatively modulate synthesis or function of tra-2 in both XX and XO animals. sup-27 may play a role in X-chromosome dosage compensation and influence sex determination indirectly.  相似文献   

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An unselected series of chimeric mice were test mated to determine the parental lineage of their functional gametes. The cytological sex of each animal was established and confirmed in all cases by karyological analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes. The parental cell lineage for each cytological sex was unequivocally established by the presence or absence of the radiation-induced translocation 15(14) (T6). Eleven animals analysed, 10 of these were chimeric. Among the 10 chimeras, 3 were phenotypically female and 7 were phenotypically male. The cytological sex ratio (XY/XY:XX/XY:XX/XX) was 1:6:2. There were 646 offspring from test matings of these chimeras. The coat color analysis of these offspring demonstrated a concordance of cytological sex of the lineage resulting in functional gametes with the phenotypic sex of the animal.  相似文献   

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Summary This study was conducted to define the range of phenotypic expression and mode of inheritance of XX sex reversal in the cocker spaniel dog. Breeding experiments produced F1, F1BC, and F2 generations in which 29 XX true hermaphrodites and 3 XX males were defined by chromosome constitution, serial histologic sections of the gonads, and examination of the internal and external genitalia. In XX true hermaphrodites, the most common combination of gonads was bilateral ovotestes, followed by ovotestis and ovary, then ovotestis and testis. The amount of testicular tissue in the two gonads was closely correlated within each true hermaphrodite. The distribution of testicular tissue within ovotestes of true hermaphrodites was consistent with the hypothesis that testicular differentiation is initiated in the center of the gonad and spreads outward. XX males had bilateral aspermatogenic testes and the internal ducts and external genitalia were more masculinized than in true hermaphrodites. Results of breeding experiments are consistent with autosomal recessive inheritance, the affected phenotype being expressed only in dogs with an XX chromosome constitution. The phenotypic expression and mode of inheritance of this disorder is compared to XX sex reversal in humans and other animals.  相似文献   

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The rodent Ellobius lutescens is an exceptional mammal which determines male sex constitutively without the SRY gene and, therefore, may serve as an animal model for human 46,XX female-to-male sex reversal. It was suggested that other factors of the network of sex-determining genes determine maleness in these animals. However, some sex-determining genes like SOX9 and SF1 have already been excluded by segregation analysis as primary sex-determining factors in E. lutescens. In this work, we have cloned and characterized two genes of the PIS (polled intersex syndrome) gene interval, which were reported as candidates in female-to-male sex reversal in hornless goats recently. The genes Foxl2 and Pisrt1 from that interval were identified in E. lutescens DNA and mapped to Chromosome 8. We have excluded linkage of Foxl2 and Pisrt1 loci with the sex of the animals. Hence, the involvement of this gene region in sex determination may be specific for goats and is not a general mechanism of XX sex reversal or XX male sex determination.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this article have been submitted to GenBank and have been assigned the accession number AY623815.  相似文献   

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The primary sex-determining signal in Caenorhabditis elegans is the ratio of X chromosomes to sets of autosomes (X/A ratio), normally 1.0 in hermaphrodites (XX) and 0.5 in males (XO). XX triploids (X/A = 0.67) are males, but if these animals carry a partial duplication of the X chromosome such that X/A approximately equal to 0.7, they develop as intersexes that are sexually mosaic. We have analyzed these mosaics using Nomarski microscopy and in situ hybridization to obtain information on whether sex determination decisions can be made independently in different cells and tissues, and when these commitments are made. The observed patterns of male and female cells in individual animals indicate that sex determination decisions can be influenced by anterior-posterior position and that sex determination decisions can be made as late as the third larval stage of postembryonic development. Although these decisions clearly can be made independently in different lineages, they show substantial biases toward one sex or the other in individual animals. We interpret these results to suggest that sex determination in C. elegans is not entirely cell autonomous.  相似文献   

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C. C. Akerib  B. J. Meyer 《Genetics》1994,138(4):1105-1125
The primary sex-determination signal of Caenorhabditis elegans is the ratio of X chromosomes to sets of autosomes (X/A ratio). This signal coordinately controls both sex determination and X chromosome dosage compensation. To delineate regions of X that contain counted signal elements, we examined the effect on the X/A ratio of changing the dose of specific regions of X, using duplications in XO animals and deficiencies in XX animals. Based on the mutant phenotypes of genes that are controlled by the signal, we expected that increases (in males) or decreases (in hermaphrodites) in the dose of X chromosome elements could cause sex-specific lethality. We isolated duplications and deficiencies of specific X chromosome regions, using strategies that would permit their recovery regardless of whether they affect the signal. We identified a dose-sensitive region at the left end of X that contains X chromosome signal elements. XX hermaphrodites with only one dose of this region have sex determination and dosage compensation defects, and XO males with two doses are more severely affected and die. The hermaphrodite defects are suppressed by a downstream mutation that forces all animals into the XX mode of sex determination and dosage compensation. The male lethality is suppressed by mutations that force all animals into the XO mode of both processes. We were able to subdivide this region into three smaller regions, each of which contains at least one signal element. We propose that the X chromosome component of the sex-determination signal is the dose of a relatively small number of genes.  相似文献   

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We report a genetic characterization of several essential components of the dosage compensation process in Caenorhabditis elegans. Mutations in the genes dpy-26, dpy-27, dpy-28, and the newly identified gene dpy-29 disrupt dosage compensation, resulting in elevated X-linked gene expression in XX animals and an incompletely penetrant maternal-effect XX-specific lethality. These dpy mutations appear to cause XX animals to express each set of X-linked genes at a level appropriate for XO animals. XO dpy animals are essentially wild type. Both the viability and the level of X-linked gene expression in XX animals carrying mutations in two or more dpy genes are the same as in animals carrying only a single mutation, consistent with the view that these genes act together in a single process (dosage compensation). To define a potential time of action for the gene dpd-28 we performed reciprocal temperature-shift experiments with a heat sensitive allele. The temperature-sensitive period for lethality begins 5 hr after fertilization at the 300-cell stage and extends to about 9 hr, a point well beyond the end of cell proliferation. This temperature-sensitive period suggests that dosage compensation is functioning in XX animals by mid-embryogenesis, when many zygotically transcribed genes are active. While mutations in the dpy genes have no effect on the sexual phenotype of otherwise wild-type XX or XO animals, they do have a slight feminizing effect on animals whose sex-determination process is already genetically perturbed. The opposite directions of the feminizing effects on sex determination and the masculinizing effects on dosage compensation caused by the dpy mutations are inconsistent with the wild-type dpy genes acting to coordinately control both processes. Instead, the feminizing effects are most likely an indirect consequence of disruptions in dosage compensation caused by the dpy mutations. Based on the cumulative evidence, the likely mechanism of dosage compensation in C. elegans involves reducing X-linked gene expression in XX animals to equal that in XO animals via the action of the dpy genes.  相似文献   

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The phenotypic effects of a new recessive mutation mas −1, which in homozygous condition induces testicular development in XX animals of common carp ( Cyprinus carpio L.), are described. Sexual differentiation of XX; mas −+/ mas −1 and XX; mas −1/ mas −1 animals was compared with the gonad development of XX wild type females and XY males. In XX females gonadal differentiation starts with the formation of an ovarian cavity and entry into meiosis of germ cells at around 80 days post hatching (ph). Male gonads remain quiescent until 120 days ph during which period they develop a network of loose connective tissue. Spermatogenesis starts with tubule formation and the differentiation of germ cells into spermatogonia type B. Heterozygous XX; mas −+/ mas −1 animals developed as normal females, but in homozygous XX; mas −1/ mas −1 animals two types of gonad development were observed. In the first type, germ cells did not enter meiosis until 100 days ph when they differentiated as spermatogonia. An ovarian cavity was not formed but male specific connective tissue developed instead. These gonad developed as normal testes. In the second type, germ cells differentiated at 80 days ph as either oocytes or spermatocytes, which resulted in the gonads developing as ovotestes. The formation of an ovarian cavity was in most cases incomplete. The phenotypic effects of mas −1 are interpreted as a timing mismatch between mas activation and female sex differentiation.  相似文献   

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T. Schedl  J. Kimble 《Genetics》1988,119(1):43-61
This paper describes the isolation and characterization of 16 mutations in the germ-line sex determination gene fog-2 (fog for feminization of the germ line). In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans there are normally two sexes, self-fertilizing hermaphrodites (XX) and males (XO). Wild-type XX animals are hermaphrodite in the germ line (spermatogenesis followed by oogenesis), and female in the soma. fog-2 loss-of-function mutations transform XX animals into females while XO animals are unaffected. Thus, wild-type fog-2 is necessary for spermatogenesis in hermaphrodites but not males. The fem genes and fog-1 are each essential for specification of spermatogenesis in both XX and XO animals. fog-2 acts as a positive regulator of the fem genes and fog-1. The tra-2 and tra-3 genes act as negative regulators of the fem genes and fog-1 to allow oogenesis. Two models are discussed for how fog-2 might positively regulate the fem genes and fog-1 to permit spermatogenesis; fog-2 may act as a negative regulator of tra-2 and tra-3, or fog-2 may act positively on the fem genes and fog-1 rendering them insensitive to the negative action of tra-2 and tra-3.  相似文献   

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We describe a patient with the co-occurrence of a familial 9;11 reciprocal translocation and an XX sex reversal. The patient had cryptorchidism, delayed development, dysmorphic features and attention deficiency hyperactive disorder (ADHD). The proband's karyotype was 46,XX,t(9;11)(p22;p15.5) and he was positive for SRY gene. The father was found to be the carrier of the similar translocation. The co-occurrence of XX sex reversal and autosomal reciprocal translocation has not been described previously. The possible reasons for the manifestation of features other than those found in XX sex reversal is described.  相似文献   

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黑斑蛙的减数分裂研究   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
本文研究了黑斑蛙的减数分裂,发现其性染色体所形成的性二价体主要呈末端与末端联接,浓缩期占79.6%,中期Ⅰ占75%,这进一步证明黑斑蛙确实存在XY型性别决定机制,这种XY型性染色体虽形态相同,但已发生了质的分化,可能是同型异质。黑斑蛙的性染色体并不形成性泡,少数二价体有中间交叉。  相似文献   

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